By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON, Jan 29 (Reuters) – A proposed merger between Elon Musk’s SpaceX and xAI, reported exclusively by Reuters on Thursday, could give fresh momentum to Musk’s plan to launch satellite data centers into orbit as he battles for supremacy in โthe rapidly escalating AI race against tech giants like Alphabet’s Google, Meta and OpenAI.
Here is what we know about space-based AI โcomputing:
WHAT ARE SPACE-BASED AI DATA CENTERS?
Spaceโbased data centers – still an earlyโstage concept – would likely rely on hundreds of solarโpowered satellites networked in orbit to handle the enormous computing demands of โAI systems like xAIโs Grok or OpenAIโs ChatGPT, at a time when energyโhungry Earthโbased facilities are becoming increasingly costly to run. Advocates say operating above the atmosphere offers nearly constant solar power and eliminates the cooling burdens that dominate groundโbased dataโcenter costs, potentially making AI processing far more efficient.
But engineers and space specialists caution that commercial viability remains years away, citing major risks from space debris, defending hardware against cosmic radiation, limited options for in-person maintenance, โ and launch costs. Deutsche Bank expects the first smallโscale โorbital dataโcenter deployments in 2027โ28 to test both the technology and the economics, with wider constellations โ potentially scaling into the hundreds or thousandsโ emerging only in the 2030s if those early missions work.
WHY DOES MUSK WANT TO DO โTHIS?
SpaceX is the most successful rocket-maker in history and has successfully launched thousands of satellites into orbit as part of its Starlink internet service. If space-based AI computing is the future, SpaceX is the most ideally placed to operate AI-ready satelliteย clusters or facilitate the setting up of on-orbit computing.
“It’s a no-brainer building solar-power data โcenters in space … the lowest-cost place to put AI will be space, and that will be true within two years, three at the โlatest,” Musk said at the World Economic Forum in Davos earlier this month.
SpaceX is considering an initial public offering this year that could value the rocket and satellite company at over $1 trillion, Reuters has reported. Part of the proceeds would go to funding the development of AI data center satellites, sources say.
WHAT ARE MUSK’S COMPETITORS DOING?
Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has been working on technology for AI data centers in space, building on the Amazon founder’s prediction that “giant gigawatt data centers” in orbit could beat the cost of their Earth-bound peers within 10 to 20 years by tapping uninterrupted โ solar power and radiating heat directly into space.





