AI Infrastructure Race Intensifies with Space-Based Data Centers
OpenAI’s own infrastructure strategy remains grounded on Earth, but at a very large scale. In July 2025, the company said its Stargate platform had advanced to more than 5 gigawatts of AI data center capacity under development and reaffirmed its broader goal of investing $500 billion in 10 gigawatts of U.S. AI infrastructure over four years. That context matters because the new $122 billion raise does not simply expand OpenAI’s balance sheet; it strengthens a terrestrial buildout already measured in gigawatts, millions of chips, and long-horizon industrial commitments.
SpaceX is pitching a more radical answer to the same bottleneck. Reuters reported that the company has filed plans to launch a constellation of 1 million solar-powered AI data-center satellites. TechCrunch separately reported that SpaceX sought federal approval in January for up to 1 million such satellites, framing them as a response to accelerating demand for AI computing power. The appeal is obvious: orbit offers abundant solar exposure and removes some of the land, water, and local grid constraints now slowing hyperscale data-center development on Earth.
Space-Based Data Centers: Potential and Challenges
That skepticism does not mean the idea is irrelevant. It may instead point to a narrower first market. Reuters reported that some analysts see space-based computing as a niche complement to Earth-based infrastructure, potentially useful for military constellations, spacecraft, or space stations rather than as a direct replacement for ground facilities. In that sense, SpaceX’s filing may be less a near-term substitute for terrestrial hyperscale campuses than a bid to define the outer edge of AI infrastructure strategy before rivals do.
Reuters also reported that Blue Origin is backing an orbital data center concept called Project Sunrise, while Starcloud recently raised $170 million at a $1.1 billion valuation to pursue off-planet computing.
Emerging Strategies in AI Deployment and Infrastructure
SpaceX’s orbital data-center ambitions and OpenAI’s record-breaking fundraising are part of the same story: artificial intelligence is shifting into an infrastructure race rather than just a software race. OpenAI is investing new capital into a traditional but large-scale terrestrial approach.
SpaceX is testing whether the next frontier is literal space. Currently, the evidence still favors land-based AI infrastructure as the more practical option. However, the emergence of serious orbital proposals indicates that the industry’s power and cooling limits are now so significant that once-theoretical alternatives are entering the mainstream conversation.




