- SpaceX admits global GPU shortages threaten its orbital AI computing ambitions
- Orbital data centers cannot function without huge volumes of advanced semiconductor hardware
- TeraFab remains uncertain despite massive investments and ambitious semiconductor production targets
SpaceX has filed documents for its upcoming IPO that reveal a worrying reliance on a handful of GPU suppliers.
The company’s Form S-1 document openly states that orbital AI ambitions require more chips than the market currently offers.
Elon Musk’s company buys all of its GPUs on a purchase order basis, without any long-term contractual agreements with direct chip suppliers.
Space ambitions collide with a brutal global shortage of GPUs
This purchasing approach leaves SpaceX vulnerable to any disruptions that affect semiconductor manufacturing, from natural disasters to geopolitical conflicts.
The company plans to place computing infrastructure in space, but that vision requires a volume of GPUs far greater than any vendor can currently provide.
Major AI chip buyers like Nvidia have already made massive supply commitments totaling $145 billion, pushing smaller buyers further down the queue.
SpaceX admits that “the manufacturing and supply of servers and networking equipment for our technical infrastructure, including GPUs and other specialized components, is limited to a small number of qualified suppliers.”
“Our ability to realize large-scale orbital AI depends on our ability to access a sufficient number of AI chips, many more than we currently have,” reads the SpaceX filing.
Orbital data centers cannot start without these components, and the current supply strategy offers no protection against shortages.
To escape this dependence, SpaceX, together with Tesla and xAI, plans to build TeraFab, a dedicated semiconductor facility in Texas using Intel’s 14A process technology.
The project requires tens of billions of dollars in investment, but the S-1 filing explicitly warns that TeraFab could fail.
“Although we plan to build Terafab to meet these supply constraints, Terafab may not be successful, in which case we may not have sufficient alternative sources of AI chips to meet our orbital AI computing demands,” the document states.
Even if construction is successful, the company plans to continue sourcing the majority of its materials from third-party suppliers.
This means that the orbital data center project remains tied to the same unreliable market.
TeraFab still relies heavily on unstable partnerships and uncertain execution
At this time, the partnership between SpaceX, Tesla and Intel on TeraFab remains unstable and there is no legal obligation for either party to remain engaged.
“Although we have a master agreement with Tesla, neither Tesla nor Intel are obligated to remain part of the project, and we cannot enter into such definitive agreements,” the Form S-1 states.
If either partner leaves, TeraFab loses both an important customer and the process technology developer needed to make the chips.
IPO risk factors often include improbable catastrophes, so these admissions require measured interpretation.
Yet SpaceX has identified a concrete bottleneck: Orbital data centers require chips that don’t exist in sufficient quantities anywhere on Earth.
No amount of rocket reuse or satellite engineering can get around a foundry’s limited wafer production, and TeraFab remains a gamble rather than a guarantee.
Via Tom Hardware
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