Space-Based Data Centres: The Future of Secure, Sustainable Computing?

Science & Tech 12:03 10.04.2025

It sounds like something from a science fiction movie, but Stephen Eisele is confident that one day his company will open a data centre on the Moon.The way we see it is that by putting the data centre in space, you're really offering unparalleled security," says the president of Lonestar Data Holdings.Last month, the Florida-based firm claimed to have successfully tested a tiny data centre the size of a hardback book that hitched a ride to the Moon on the Athena Lunar Lander from US space exploration firm Intuitive Machines. This, in turn, had been launched by a rocket from Elon Musk's SpaceX.Data centres are the vast warehouses that house stacks of computers that store and process data used by websites, companies and governments.

Lonestar says that putting them on the Moon will offer customers secure, reliable data processing, while taking advantage of unlimited solar energy to power them.And while space-based data centres may sound far-fetched, it's an idea that's really starting to take off.Part of the reason is rocketing demand and the difficulty of finding suitable sites on Earth.The ever-expanding use of artificial intelligence (AI) computing has seen a massive increase in the amount of data that needs to be stored and processed around the world.As a result, the need for data centres has shot up too, with annual demand set to rise between 19% and 22% by 2030, according to global management consultants McKinsey.

New facilities are springing up all the time - but it's getting hard to find places to put them. Data centres are large and sprawling, and use enormous amounts of power and water for cooling.

And increasingly local people don't want them built nearby.Putting data centres in space – either in orbit around Earth, or on the Moon - the theory goes, means they can't do quite so much harm. There's more-or-less unlimited energy available from the sun, for example, and no neighbours to complain about the environmental impacts.Not only that, space-based data centres could specialise in services for spacecraft and other space facilities, with space-to-space data transfers quicker than from the ground.Last summer, a European Commission-funded feasibility study into orbiting data centres published its results.The Ascend report by carried out by Thales Alenia Space - a joint venture between French and Italian aerospace groups Thales and Leonardo - published its results.It determined that deploying data centres in space "could transform the European digital landscape", and be "more eco-friendly".

Thales Alenia Space envisages building a constellation of 13 satellites measuring a combined 200m-by-80m, and with a total data processing power of around 10 megawatts (MW). That's equivalent to a current medium-sized, ground-based data centre, with some 5,000 servers.Based on technologies that already exist or are under development, the satellites would be assembled in orbit.Damien Dumestier, Ascend project architect at Thales Alenia Space, says that for space-based data centres to be more environmentally friendly than existing ground-based ones it will be necessary to make the rocket launchers 10 times less emissive over their lifecycles. He says this looks possible.

But in order to cover the new technology's developments and the production capacity ramp-up to benefit from scale, we have to consider larger system capacity, around 200MW, meaning 200 of our envisaged large space infrastructures and 200 launches.The main question is when an adapted launcher will be ready. Depending on the investment and decisions to be taken, this could be done for 2030 or 2035, meaning commercial viability before 2037.However, despite this optimism from firms aiming to develop the technology, Dr Domenico Vicinanza, associate professor of intelligent systems and data science at Anglia Ruskin University in the UK, says there are numerous big hurdles before space-based data centres can be a viable proposition.

Even with the contribution and advancements of companies like SpaceX, launching hardware into orbit remains extremely expensive.Each kilogram sent into space costs thousands of dollars.Space-based data centres would require not only the data equipment but also the infrastructure to protect, power, and cool them. All of which add up in weight and complexity.Cooling the equipment will be a particular problem, because even though space is cold, conventional cooling systems don't work will without gravity.Meanwhile, space weather can damage electronics, while the ever-increasing quantity of space debris puts the physical hardware at risk.Fixing problems in orbit is far from straightforward. Even with robotics and automation, there are limits to what can be repaired remotely.A big hardware failure might necessitate a costly human mission, potentially making downtime stretch for weeks or months.

Yet firms like Lonestar are supremely confident, and say that they are responding to demand. "We wouldn't be doing this if the customers weren't asking us to," says Mr Scott.Its next target is to put a small data centre in orbit around the moon in 2027. Meanwhile, other companies are hoping to get there a bit faster, such as Washington state-based Starcloud, which is due to launch a satellite-based data centre next month, and start commercial operations in mid-2026.Lonestar's Mr Eidele says that space-based facilities offer more security for governments and businesses because their data does not need to be routed through terrestrial networks. Instead the information can be beamed directly from space to a dedicated ground station.It's like having the vaults at the back of the bank.

The distance to the Moon means that data takes about a second and a half to reach the ground - this doesn't matter for some applications, like longer-term data storage and backups.And meanwhile, says Lonestar founder and chief executive Chris Stott, space-based data centres can help organisations meet regulations about data sovereignty - the need to hold peoples' data in the country of origin.Under space law, that box of electronics is literally under the law of the licensing or launching state - it is an actual embassy in space.Lonestar already has customers lined up, including the state of Florida and the Isle of Man government.

Madina Mammadova\\EDnews

IEPF issued a statement regarding Azerbaijani children at the UN Human Rights Council

News line

Azerbaijani oil price falls below $64
12:36 02.05.2025
Changes are coming: the UN is preparing a large-scale reform of the global architecture
12:31 02.05.2025
UNDP ceases operations in Azerbaijan
12:23 02.05.2025
Azerbaijan drafting a new state program to ensure food security
12:18 02.05.2025
Preparations for the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between Azerbaijan and Nepal
12:11 02.05.2025
Apple faces $900 million in losses due to Trump's trade war
12:03 02.05.2025
The Strangest Place on Earth Discovered
11:58 02.05.2025
Scientists have discovered what makes you itch
11:54 02.05.2025
Agricultural innovations yield results in Azerbaijan
11:43 02.05.2025
Mysterious disappearance in the Amazon sky: a plane with passengers disappeared in Bolivia
11:38 02.05.2025
Washington's role in Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks: progress and prospects
11:26 02.05.2025
Iran, Azerbaijan can jointly promote initiatives
11:21 02.05.2025
Azerbaijan aims to expand participation in carbon markets
11:19 02.05.2025
Secretary General of Communist Party of Vietnam to visit Azerbaijan
11:11 02.05.2025
Leyla Aliyeva attends “Only Culture” musical and artistic program
11:09 02.05.2025
Leyla Aliyeva and Arzu Aliyeva visit Polad Hashimov's home
10:56 02.05.2025
Uzbekistan, Japan,,Azerbaijan strengthen friendly relations and cooperation
10:43 02.05.2025
Heydar Aliyev's abolition of censorship in Azerbaijan created conditions for the expansion of pluralism
10:38 02.05.2025
Film titled 'Khojaly. The Last Wedding...' to be aired
10:36 02.05.2025
President's Cup-2025 regatta to conclude in Azerbaijan's Mingachevir
10:31 02.05.2025
Artificial intelligence has managed to crack passwords with the help of powerful processors
10:26 02.05.2025
Skype platform is being discontinued
10:19 02.05.2025
Leyla and Arzu Aliyeva participated in a tree-planting campaign in Sumgayit
10:11 02.05.2025
'The Social Processes in the Context of Media' forum held in Baku
10:04 02.05.2025
Trump announced the May 11 date on November 8th
10:04 02.05.2025
Mass grave discovered in Khojaly
12:15 01.05.2025
Pentagon threatens Iran over its support for Houthis
12:10 01.05.2025
Trainings on "New Trends in Strategic and Crisis Communication" conclude
12:05 01.05.2025
Azerbaijani Parliament approves accelerated digital transmission of guardianship
12:02 01.05.2025
Trial of Armenians accused of war crimes underway
11:54 01.05.2025
A memorandum was signed between the Multiculturalism Center and ICESCO
11:50 01.05.2025
"Crocodile Eye" and "The Twist" - Amazing Photos of Rare Spiral Galaxies Captured
11:42 01.05.2025
Baku branch of the National Bank of Iran resumes operations
11:38 01.05.2025
Azerbaijan and Iran discuss launch of direct Tabriz-Baku-Tabriz flight
11:32 01.05.2025
In the first quarter, Azerbaijan exported $450 million worth of non-oil products to Russia, Turkey, and Georgia
11:26 01.05.2025
The Milli Majlis has approved the appointment of Kamran Aliyev as Prosecutor General
11:22 01.05.2025
Preparation of design for the construction of liberated villages of Gazakh has begun
11:15 01.05.2025
Azerbaijan-Africa cooperation is expanding: new partnerships and international forums
11:11 01.05.2025
The 7th meeting of the Azerbaijan-Great Britain Intergovernmental Commission was held
11:05 01.05.2025
Azerbaijan’s Combined Arms Army holds command-staff exercise
11:02 01.05.2025
Hamısı