Bezos’ Blue Origin joins race to put AI data centers in space

Share This Post

Blue Origin has entered the race to send data centers into space, with a new application to the Federal Communications Commission requesting permission to launch more than 50,000 satellites into orbit.

In the March 19 FCC filing, the space tech company, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, outlined its “Project Sunrise” initiative as a means to address mounting demand for AI compute while reducing the high water and energy needs typically seen at terrestrial sites.

The project would complement the company’s TeraWave network. Plans for this 5,408-satellite constellation were first revealed in January, pitched as a network to deliver ultra-high-speed connectivity between satellites, ground stations and customers.

“The societal benefits of AI are fundamentally constrained by the availability and affordability of the computing infrastructure that powers it,” the company said in its filing. “Space-based data centers can help break this bottleneck.”

Related:Nscale Valued at $14.6B After Raising Another $2B

According to the filing, the satellites would operate in circular “sun-synchronous” orbits at altitudes between 500 and 1,800 kilometers, enabling continuous access to solar power and removing the need for electrical grids and water-intensive cooling systems.

“The built-in efficiencies of solar-powered satellites, continuous access to solar energy, and the absence of land and grid constraints could significantly lower the marginal cost of compute compared to terrestrial alternatives,” the company added.

While the filing did not detail the scale of computing power the satellites would deliver, the project is positioned as serving the public interest by enabling scalable computing infrastructure to support “economic competitiveness, technological innovation, and broad societal benefit.”

With AI compute demands anticipated to keep rising alongside industries’ increased rollout of the tech, interest in space as the new frontier of infrastructure deployment has been on the rise in recent years.

In January, Elon Musk’s SpaceX reportedly sought FCC approval to deploy up to one million satellites to help meet accelerating AI compute demand.

Other companies, including Google, Axiom Space and Aetherflux have also expressed interest in launching their data centers into space.

Related Posts

NEAR Protocol (NEAR) gains 6.3%, leading index higher

CoinDesk Indices presents its daily market update, highlighting the...

Bitcoin Rallies, But Traders Still Realizing $479M In Losses

Trusted Editorial content, reviewed by leading industry experts and...

Coinbase disruption tied to AWS outage draws criticism amid staff layoffs and Q1 losses

Coinbase (COIN) reported a multi-hour disruption to crypto trading...

U.S. added 115K jobs in April, nearly doubling expectations

The U.S. labor market continued to show at least...

Beijing lab at $20B as AI investors look to China

Chinese AI vendor Moonshot has raised funding of about...

Ethereum Bears Target $1,800 ETH Price: Here Is Why

Ether’s (ETH) price has retraced by over 5.6% to...