Jeff Bezos is for putting data centers in space. He just thinks the 2-3 year timelines being thrown around are too fast.
The Amazon founder told CNBC the tech is "very realistic" but not that soon. His own firm already has a plan to prove it.
The Hype Versus The Hardware
Putting data centers in orbit has become a hot idea in the AI race.
Up there, the sun is always on. Down here, you have to fight for land.
Both points make space data centers a strong pull. AI demand is pushing earth-based data centers up against energy limits.
Musk said in February that orbital data centers were a key reason he merged SpaceX with his AI startup xAI.
Other tech bosses have backed the same idea.
Bezos is dialing back the hype. He said launch costs, chip costs, and energy all still need to come down.
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Blue Origin's Quiet Build-Out
While Bezos plays down the timeline, his rocket firm is already laying the base.
In March, Blue Origin asked the FCC for the green light to launch 51,600 sats into low earth orbit. The plan is called Project Sunrise.
Those sats would ride on TeraWave, Blue Origin's planned cluster.
The firm wants to start sending up TeraWave in the fourth quarter of 2027.
The bigger picture: Project Sunrise is one of the most ambitious orbital plans on file.
It puts Blue Origin head to head with SpaceX for the same orbital real estate.
Bezos also said Blue Origin is working with NASA on a base on the moon. The plan is to make solar cells from moon rocks.
The moon's low gravity makes it cheap to send things into space.
What To Watch
SpaceX is set to file for its IPO this week, with Goldman Sachs as the lead bank.
Musk last put the firm's value at $1.25 trillion after the xAI merger. The IPO could come in at $1.75 trillion or more.
Space stocks have been rallying ahead of the IPO. President Trump's "Golden Dome" defense plan has helped too.
It could push more cash into the space sector.
Bezos said he is not sure where SpaceX's value comes from. Is it from the firm's books, or a bet on what is next?
He is sure of one thing. "Space is going to be a gigantic industry," he said.
The watchpoints from here are clear:
- When SpaceX files its IPO paperwork.
- How the FCC moves on Blue Origin's Project Sunrise.
- How fast launch costs fall in the next year or two.
All three will shape how soon orbit data centers really arrive. Wall Street will watch each one closely.
The next year or two should bring some clear signs.
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