China Advances Space Computing With 1st Large-Scale Constellation as Market Eyes $1 Trillion by 2035
Updated
Updated · TV BRICS (Eng) · Jun 1
China Advances Space Computing With 1st Large-Scale Constellation as Market Eyes $1 Trillion by 2035
5 articles · Updated · TV BRICS (Eng) · Jun 1
China said its first large-scale computing satellite constellation has made significant progress, processing data in orbit instead of sending raw information back to Earth.
That approach cuts transmission needs and speeds decisions, with experts saying orbital networks can handle huge atmospheric datasets and produce long-range weather forecasts within minutes.
China has also advanced on-orbit AI, demonstrating sophisticated models in space that could let satellite networks analyze events autonomously in real time.
Applications under discussion include disaster response, precision agriculture, climate monitoring and resource management, extending orbital computing beyond communications into data services.
Industry analysts see space-computing services topping $1 trillion by 2035, making orbital processing a potential pillar of the broader space economy and digital infrastructure.
Are space data centers a trillion-dollar boom or a high-cost bust?
As nations build orbital data hubs, is space becoming the next global battlefield?
Could intelligent satellite swarms become the first autonomous networks beyond human control?
China's $8.4 Billion Space Computing Push: The Race to Build Orbital AI Data Centers
Overview
China is rapidly advancing its ambitions in space-based computing, driven by significant investments and the launch of ambitious satellite constellation projects. These efforts aim to build a robust AI space infrastructure to meet the growing demand for in-orbit data processing, addressing current inefficiencies where most space-generated data goes unprocessed. By leveraging the convergence of artificial intelligence, energy efficiency, and expanded space capabilities, China is accelerating initiatives like ADAspace’s 'star compute' network and Orbital Chenguang’s large-scale orbital data centers. Together, these moves position China at the forefront of tackling technical and economic challenges in the emerging space computing sector.