SpaceX wants to be Memphis's favorite internet provider. But first it has to fix a mess over pollution from its data centers. So the company is offering a big discount on Starlink service.
The Half-Price Discount
On June 30, 2026, news broke that SpaceX would slash monthly Starlink fees by half for Memphis customers who opt in. Standard plans cost between $55 and $130 a month. The offer is meant to win back local support after community opposition and a lawsuit over pollution from the company's data centers in the region.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp
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Legal and Community Pushback
The trouble started when xAI, an AI company that SpaceX bought earlier in 2026, built a huge data center called Colossus in Memphis. xAI also runs data centers in Southaven, Mississippi. The Colossus facility uses gas turbines for power, which has caused community and environmental pushback over pollution. A lawsuit filed by the NAACP alleges that xAI violated pollution regulations. The US Department of Justice recently stepped in to defend xAI in that case.
To calm things down, SpaceX agreed to restart a wastewater recycling plant that had been on hold since late 2025. The plant will treat used water for both the Colossus data centers and the Tennessee Valley Authority, the local electric utility. In a social media post, Memphis Mayor said, "SpaceX has committed to resume construction."
This discount arrives at a pivotal time for SpaceX as it tries to win back the trust of Memphis residents. The Justice Department's decision to defend xAI signals the federal government's interest in the case.
Background on the Controversy
Since construction started, the gas-turbine-powered Colossus data center has faced intense criticism. Environmental groups and community leaders argue that the facility's emissions violate local air quality standards and pose health risks to nearby neighborhoods. The NAACP lawsuit specifically cites repeated breaches of permit limits for nitrogen oxides and particulate matter.
SpaceX's acquisition of xAI earlier in 2026 placed the responsibility for these issues under Elon Musk's corporate umbrella, making Starlink's local reputation a bargaining chip in the dispute. The wastewater plant restart, while a step toward mitigation, still requires regulatory approvals and could take years to complete.
The U.S. Department of Justice's involvement underscores the national significance of AI infrastructure, yet local environmental advocates question why federal resources are backing a facility that has repeatedly exceeded air quality permits.
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