pipeline: archive 1 source(s) post-merge
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type: source
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title: "Blue Origin joins orbital data center race — full competitive landscape: SpaceX 1M, Starcloud 88K, Blue Origin 51.6K, Google Project Suncatcher, China 200K"
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author: "SpaceNews"
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url: https://spacenews.com/blue-origin-joins-the-orbital-data-center-race/
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date: 2026-03-20
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domain: space-development
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secondary_domains: [energy]
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format: thread
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status: processed
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priority: high
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tags: [orbital-data-center, competitive-landscape, spacex, blue-origin, google, starcloud, china, sector-activation, demand-threshold, AI-compute, solar-power]
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flagged_for_theseus: ["Multiple national strategies converging on orbital AI compute — China's 200K-satellite ODC constellation framed around data sovereignty and AI independence creates geopolitical AI infrastructure race with implications for AI governance"]
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flagged_for_rio: ["Full ODC competitive landscape: 6 players in 4 months (Nov 2025-Mar 2026) — new space infrastructure sector forming faster than any prior category. Capital formation dynamics for Gate 1 vs Gate 2 stage companies?"]
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## Content
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SpaceNews March 20, 2026 article covering the full orbital data center competitive landscape after Blue Origin's Project Sunrise FCC filing:
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**Full landscape (Q1 2026):**
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| Company | Filing / Status | Scale | Architecture |
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|---------|----------------|-------|--------------|
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| Starcloud | Operational (Nov 2025); FCC for 88K satellites (Feb 3, 2026) | 1 satellite operational; 88K planned | H100/Blackwell, rideshare, Falcon 9 |
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| SpaceX | FCC for 1M satellites (Jan 30, 2026) | 1M planned | Solar, AI inference, 500-2,000 km |
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| Blue Origin | FCC Project Sunrise 51,600 (Mar 19); TeraWave 5,400 | 57K planned | SSO, solar, New Glenn captive demand |
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| Google | Project Suncatcher | Announced, no FCC filing yet | TPUs, solar, FSO links |
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| NVIDIA | Space Computing initiative | Partnership/ecosystem role | H100/Blackwell as platform |
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| China | State consortium | 200K planned | Sovereignty-framed |
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| Sophia Space | $10M raised Feb 2026 | Early stage | Unknown |
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**Key structural observations:**
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1. All major constellations use solar power / sun-optimized orbits — architectural convergence across independent proposals
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2. Six major FCC filings or announcements in 4 months (Nov 2025 - Mar 2026) — sector formation speed unprecedented
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3. Every major constellation targets AI compute workloads specifically, not general data processing
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4. China's 200K constellation is state-coordinated; every US entry is private capital (SpaceX, Blue Origin, Starcloud, Google, Sophia Space)
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**Competitive dynamics:**
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- Starcloud has first-mover proof-of-concept and NVIDIA partnership
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- SpaceX has launch advantage (Starlink precedent, Starship capacity for 1M satellite deployment)
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- Blue Origin has New Glenn + Project Sunrise vertical integration logic (captive demand)
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- Google has AI chip expertise (TPUs), existing cloud infrastructure relationships
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- China has state coordination, 200K scale, and data sovereignty political motivation
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**The demand question (Gate 2):**
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Article notes all players cite "environmental benefits" (reduced water/energy/land for terrestrial data centers) as demand justification. But concrete commercial AI compute customer contracts are not documented in the article. The demand signal is inferred from AI infrastructure constraints rather than contracted revenue.
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## Agent Notes
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**Why this matters:** This is the most comprehensive single source on the orbital data center competitive landscape. It establishes that the ODC sector is not Blue Origin's niche play — it's a multi-national, multi-company race with a Chinese state actor and four US private players, all converging on the same solar-powered orbital AI compute architecture within 4 months.
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**What surprised me:** The speed. Six major entries in four months (Nov 2025 - Mar 2026). No prior space sector — not commercial stations, not debris removal, not even Starlink — attracted this many significant players this quickly at the FCC/strategic announcement stage. The speed suggests AI infrastructure demand is creating real pull, not just hype.
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**What I expected but didn't find:** Customer contracts for orbital AI compute. Every player is citing architectural reasoning (solar power, no cooling water, no land) but none of the articles document a hyperscaler (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud) committing to buy orbital compute at commercial scale. The demand gate may be forming but hasn't crossed yet.
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**KB connections:**
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- [[the space economy reached 613 billion in 2024 and is converging on 1 trillion by 2032 making it a major global industry not a speculative frontier]] — ODC sector is not in the $613B figure; if even one player executes at significant scale, the $1T projection needs updating with a new sector category
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- [[China is the only credible peer competitor in space with comprehensive capabilities and state-directed acceleration closing the reusability gap in 5-8 years]] — China's 200K-satellite ODC constellation adds a new competitive dimension beyond reusability: data sovereignty and AI infrastructure independence are the motivations, creating a race that is fundamentally geopolitical, not just commercial
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**Extraction hints:**
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1. "Six independent players (Starcloud, SpaceX, Blue Origin, Google, China state consortium, Sophia Space) filed for or announced orbital data center megaconstellations within four months (November 2025-March 2026), converging on solar-powered sun-synchronous architectures — the fastest sector formation in commercial space history" (confidence: experimental — formation speed is documented; sector activation unproven)
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2. "China's 200,000-satellite orbital data center constellation frames orbital compute as an AI sovereignty infrastructure play (state-coordinated, data sovereignty motivation) while all US entries are private capital — creating an orbital AI compute race with geopolitical structure similar to the satellite internet race" (confidence: experimental — the motivations are attributed in reporting; state execution timeline uncertain)
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**Context:** This source came one day after Blue Origin's FCC filing and represents the first comprehensive mapping of the competitive landscape. No single prior article captured the full six-player picture. The implication for the two-gate model: if six players are investing simultaneously in Gate 1 demonstration, the demand signal they're responding to must be real — or this is a speculative race that collapses when commercial AI compute economics are tested.
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## Curator Notes
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PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[the space economy reached 613 billion in 2024 and is converging on 1 trillion by 2032 making it a major global industry not a speculative frontier]]
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WHY ARCHIVED: Establishes the full ODC competitive landscape for the first time. Critical context for any claim about the orbital data center sector — no claim about ODC can be well-grounded without this competitive picture.
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EXTRACTION HINT: Extract the sector formation speed claim and the architectural convergence claim as experimental confidence. Flag the China sovereignty framing for cross-domain synthesis with Leo (geopolitical competition) and Theseus (AI governance/autonomy). Do NOT extract demand validation claims — customer contracts are not documented.
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