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Watch this space Why Elon Musk has merged his rockets with AI

The Guardian

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February 07, 2026

The acquisition of xAI by SpaceX is a typical Elon Musk deal: big numbers backed by big ambition.

- Dan Milmo Global technology editor

Watch this space Why Elon Musk has merged his rockets with AI

As well as extending “the light of consciousness to the stars”, as Musk described it, the transaction creates a business worth $1.25tn (£915bn) by combining Musk’s rocket company with his artificial intelligence startup. It values SpaceX at $1tn and xAI at $250bn, with a stock market flotation expected in June to time with Musk’s birthday and a planetary alignment.

However, there are questions over the deal, such as whether it is good for SpaceX’s non-Musk shareholders and whether the technological premise behind it can succeed.

Why is Musk linking up rockets and AI?

For Musk, a key part of the deal’s rationale is to move datacentres - the central nervous system of AI systems - into space.

AI companies are too dependent on Earth-based datacentres that carry immense energy demands, Musk argued this week. The solution, he says, is to put as many as a million satellites into orbit to form vast, solar-powered datacentres.

Prof Julie McCann and Prof Matthew Santer, the co-directors of the school of convergence science in space, security and telecoms at Imperial College London, say solar-powered datacentres could be a future option for AI companies. However, there are limits to how much compute power can be mustered by current satellites, they say, so it would need a “planet-wide distributed computer composed of many satellites” - as envisaged by Musk.

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