EPA 裁定伊隆·馬斯克的 xAI 非法使用燃氣渦輪為資料中心供電
美國環保署(EPA)裁定伊隆·馬斯克的 xAI 在未取得適當許可的情況下,違法操作數十台天然氣渦輪機為其位於田納西州的資料中心供電,並引發環境與法規方面的疑慮。

In a move that redefines the boundaries of artificial intelligence infrastructure, SpaceX has officially filed a request with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to deploy a staggering constellation of 1 million solar-powered satellites. This unprecedented proposal, submitted on January 31, 2026, envisions a global "orbital data center" designed to bypass the escalating energy and resource constraints plaguing terrestrial AI development. By shifting the computational backbone of AI into Low Earth Orbit (LEO), SpaceX aims to harness near-constant solar energy, fundamentally altering the economics of machine learning and data processing.
The filing represents more than just a logistical expansion; it is a declaration of intent to accelerate humanity’s progression on the Kardashev scale. With terrestrial power grids straining under the weight of generative AI's explosive growth, Elon Musk’s aerospace giant is betting that the vacuum of space offers the ultimate solution to the industry's power and cooling bottlenecks. If approved and realized, this project would dwarf the company’s existing Starlink network, which currently numbers around 11,000 active units, and position SpaceX as the undisputed gatekeeper of the next generation of AI infrastructure.
The technical specifications outlined in the FCC application describe a network operating at altitudes between 500 and 2,000 kilometers. These satellites are designed to utilize sun-synchronous orbits and 30-degree inclinations to maximize exposure to sunlight, ensuring a continuous, renewable power supply. Unlike ground-based facilities that rely on intermittent renewable sources or fossil fuels, these orbital nodes would ostensibly access the sun’s energy directly, without atmospheric attenuation or the day-night cycle limitations found on the surface.
SpaceX’s filing utilized strikingly grand language, framing the project as a "first step towards becoming a Kardashev II-level civilization—one that can harness the sun's full power." This reference to the Kardashev scale—a method of measuring a civilization's technological advancement based on the amount of energy it is able to use—underscores the sheer ambition of the proposal. The company argues that by moving the heavy lifting of AI compute to space, humanity can support the intelligence processing needs of billions without necessitating a destructive overhaul of Earth's electrical grids.
Crucial to this architecture is the use of high-speed optical inter-satellite links (lasers), a technology SpaceX has already matured through its Starlink constellation. These lasers would form a mesh network in the vacuum of space, allowing for petabit-level data transfer between nodes and ground stations. This capability suggests that while the compute happens in orbit, the integration with terrestrial networks could remain seamless enough for training massive Large Language Models (LLMs) or handling complex inference tasks that are not strictly latency-critical.
The impetus for this orbital pivot is the unsustainable trajectory of land-based data centers. As of early 2026, the global demand for electricity to power AI has surged, leading to local moratoriums on new data center construction in power-constrained regions like Northern Virginia and Ireland. Furthermore, the water consumption required for cooling high-density GPU racks has drawn ire from environmental groups and local communities alike.
SpaceX’s proposal posits that space offers a dual advantage: unlimited solar power and a unique thermodynamic environment. While the vacuum of space acts as an insulator, making heat dissipation a complex engineering challenge, the company claims that radiative cooling techniques—emitting waste heat as infrared radiation into the deep cold of space—can be more efficient than terrestrial air or liquid cooling systems. By eliminating the need for fresh water and reducing the load on municipal power grids, SpaceX presents its orbital solution as an environmentally superior alternative.
The economic viability of this plan hinges entirely on the success of the Starship launch vehicle. With a target payload cost dropping toward $200 per kilogram, Starship is the only vehicle capable of deploying the massive tonnage required for a million-satellite constellation. The filing suggests that the decreasing cost of launch, paired with the "free" energy of the sun, will eventually make orbital compute cheaper than its terrestrial counterpart, despite the higher upfront manufacturing and deployment costs.
To better understand the strategic shift proposed by SpaceX, we have compiled a comparison of key operational metrics between traditional land-based data centers and the proposed orbital infrastructure.
Table 1: Infrastructure Comparison – Terrestrial vs. Orbital Data Centers
| Feature | Terrestrial Data Centers | Orbital Data Centers (SpaceX Proposal) |
|---|---|---|
| Power Source | Grid dependency (Fossil/Renewable mix) | Direct Solar (Near-constant uptime) |
| Cooling Mechanism | Water evaporation, Air conditioning | Radiative cooling into vacuum |
| Environmental Impact | High water usage, carbon footprint | Launch emissions, space debris risk |
| Maintenance | On-site technicians available | Remote only (Replacement required) |
| Latency | Low (fiber optic proximity) | Variable (Speed of light vs. distance) |
| Scalability Constraint | Land permits, grid capacity | Launch cadence, regulatory approval |
| Security | Physical perimeter security | Orbital isolation, cyber-hardening required |
Despite the visionary rhetoric, the proposal faces significant skepticism from the aerospace and scientific communities. The primary concern is the sheer volume of hardware. Adding one million satellites to Low Earth Orbit raises immediate alarms regarding the Kessler syndrome—a theoretical scenario where the density of objects in LEO becomes so high that collisions between objects cause a cascade, rendering space unusable for generations.
While SpaceX has emphasized its automated collision avoidance systems and precise electric propulsion, the margin for error with a million active satellites is microscopic. Astronomers also fear that such a dense constellation would permanently alter the night sky, interfering with ground-based optical and radio astronomy. The company has pledged to continue working on brightness mitigation, but the scale of this project dwarfs previous concerns raised by Starlink.
Furthermore, thermal management in a vacuum remains a formidable physics problem. On Earth, convection assists in cooling; in space, heat must be radiated away. Critics argue that the radiator surface area required to cool high-performance AI chips would make each satellite significantly larger and heavier than a standard communications satellite, potentially offsetting the launch cost advantages. However, reports indicate that SpaceX may be leveraging custom low-power silicon designs, potentially developed in collaboration with xAI, to mitigate thermal output.
This filing is not merely a technical document; it is a strategic maneuver that signals the potential convergence of Elon Musk’s business empire. Analysts suggest that this orbital data center could serve as the backend infrastructure for xAI, Musk’s artificial intelligence company, providing it with a sovereign compute capability independent of competitors like Microsoft or Google. This synergy has fueled speculation about a potential merger between SpaceX and xAI, or at least a deeply integrated partnership ahead of a rumored SpaceX IPO later this year.
The move also places pressure on other aerospace competitors. Companies like Blue Origin and emerging startups such as Starcloud have also been exploring space-based data processing, but none have proposed a constellation of this magnitude. If the FCC grants even partial approval, it could trigger a new "space race" focused not on exploration, but on computational supremacy.
In the immediate future, the regulatory battle will be intense. The FCC has historically been cautious with mega-constellation approvals, often granting licenses in tranches to ensure compliance and safety. Whether SpaceX receives authorization for the full one million satellites or a smaller pilot cluster, the filing itself marks a turning point. The conversation has shifted from "if" AI will move to space, to "when" and "at what scale." For the AI industry, the prospect of unlimited, solar-powered compute hovering above the atmosphere is a tantalizing glimpse into a post-scarcity future, provided we can navigate the orbital traffic jam it creates.