
Blue Origin, the space company founded by Jeff Bezos, has filed a formal application with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to seek the approval of Project Sunrise, a plan to deploy a constellation of over 51,600 satellites designed to host artificial intelligence (AI) computing workloads in orbit and deliver AI-custom computing power.
Filed in March 2026, Project Sunrise represents the company’s most ambitious step yet into building commercial data center infrastructure. The goal is to move some of the most power‑hungry parts of AI infrastructure off Earth and into space, where energy and cooling can be easily harnessed and handled very differently from what the company called “terrestrial data centers.”
What Blue Origin Is Proposing
According to Blue Origin’s FCC application, Project Sunrise is designed as a vast constellation of orbital data center satellites that will operate in low Earth orbit. The filing describes tens of thousands of spacecraft that would perform “advanced computation in orbit” and act as an extension, and not a replacement, of ground-based data centers. These satellites are expected to be solar powered and connected primarily through optical (laser) links.
The proposed constellation would sit in circular, sun‑synchronous orbits at altitudes between roughly 500 and 1,800 kilometers, with different satellite groupings tailored for various coverage and capacity needs. Traffic from the orbital network would be routed through Blue Origin’s planned TeraWave connectivity system and other ground links to reach enterprise, cloud, and government customers.
Why AI Data Centers Are Going to Space
Blue Origin’s pitch relies heavily on the growing problem and stress that AI training and inference are placing on power and energy infrastructure on the ground. AI data centers consume huge amounts of electricity and water for cooling and are increasingly running into local power problems, community resistance, and environmental concerns.
In its FCC filing, the company argues that shifting the most energy‑intensive compute to orbit could ease pressure on “U.S. communities and natural resources” by moving those workloads away from the ground.
Working in space also offers a thermal advantage, as the vacuum of space and continuous solar exposure in certain orbits make it easier to design systems that radiate heat and harvest power at scale. Bezos has previously said that orbital data centers are a “next step” in pushing heavy industry off Earth and has suggested that, over the next couple of decades, space‑based data centers could eventually reduce the cost of some terrestrial facilities.
How Project Sunrise Fits Into a New Space Race
Project Sunrise does not exist in isolation, as it sits on top of Blue Origin’s broader satellite and launch roadmap. The company has already outlined plans for TeraWave, a 5,408‑satellite constellation aimed at ultra‑high‑speed connectivity, which would help move data between the Sunrise satellites and ground customers.
Blue Origin’s rockets and orbital platforms are intended to provide the transport and on‑orbit infrastructure needed to assemble and maintain such a dense network.
At the same time, the initiative places Bezos in direct competition with other players experimenting with orbital compute, including SpaceX concepts for AI‐capable Starlink satellites and startup proposals for large space data center constellations.
Amazon, which Bezos founded but which operates separately, is also building its own broadband satellite network (formerly Project Kuiper, now Amazon Leo) that could eventually intersect with or complement these emerging space‑based cloud ideas.
What Comes Next
For now, Project Sunrise is at the regulatory and planning stage, with FCC approval being the key before any large‑scale deployment can begin. Blue Origin has been working for more than a year on the underlying technology for AI data centers in space, according to earlier reporting, but it still faces challenges around launch cadence, satellite manufacturing, on‑orbit reliability, and space traffic management.
Even so, the FCC filing makes clear that Bezos’ space venture is no longer just exploring the idea of orbital data centers and is now seeking authorization to build them at an unprecedented scale.