CNBC
“Some of the timelines we hear are very short,” he told CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin on Wednesday, referring to SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s plans to bring data centers into orbit in the next two to three years. “They’re probably not right.”
Bezos said one key barrier to entry is energy, and chip costs need to come down to make more room for it in data center budgets. Launch costs also need to get cheaper, he said.
Space companies are racing to make data centers in space a reality. In February, Musk said more effectively building “orbital data centers” in space was a main reason behind merging SpaceX with his artificial intelligence start-up xAI.
Blue Origin in March submitted plans to the Federal Communications Commission to send 51,600 data center satellites into low Earth orbit, as part of an initiative dubbed “Project Sunrise.”
The satellites would be supported by Blue Origin’s planned constellation, called TeraWave. Blue Origin has sought regulatory approval to launch TeraWave, saying it hopes to begin deploying the constellation in the fourth quarter of 2027.
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