Can datacentres in orbit solve for AI models’ energy demand?


UPSC Study Note: Can Datacentres in Orbit Solve for AI Models' Energy Demand?


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2010s Traditional data centres dominated by content delivery (video streaming); bandwidth focus was external (to users), not internal. [S1]
2017–22 Rise of GPU-dense AI clusters; internal bandwidth (GPU-to-GPU within a data centre) becomes the bottleneck, not external links. [S1]
2022–23 Generative AI boom (ChatGPT launch Nov 2022); global data centre electricity demand accelerates sharply. [S2]
2024 Global data centres consume ~415 TWh (1.5% of global electricity); US = 45% share, China = 25%, Europe = 15%. [S2]
2025 Data centre electricity demand rises 17% YoY to ~485 TWh; AI-focused facilities grow even faster. [S2]
Jan 2026 Google Research publishes framework for Project Suncatcher (orbital solar-powered datacentres in LEO); ISRO study reported. [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Key Definitions & Terms

Key Numbers

Metric Value Source
Global data centre electricity, 2024 ~415 TWh (~1.5% of global electricity) [S2]
YoY growth in data centre electricity, 2025 17% [S2]
Projected global data centre electricity, 2030 ~950 TWh (~3% of global electricity) [S2]
Projected global data centre electricity, 2035 ~1,200 TWh [S2]
AI data centre growth (2025–2030) Triples (fastest segment) [S2]
Renewables share of data centre electricity, current ~27% [S2]
US share of global data centre electricity (2024) 45% [S2]
China share 25% [S2]
Europe share 15% [S2]

Key Actors


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Global data centres consumed approximately 415 TWh of electricity in 2024, representing ~1.5% of world electricity use. [S2]
  2. Data centre electricity demand grew by 17% in 2025 — far outpacing global electricity demand growth of 3%. [S2]
  3. By 2030, global data centre electricity is projected to reach ~950 TWh, approximately 3% of global electricity demand. [S2]
  4. AI-focused data centres are projected to triple their electricity consumption between 2025 and 2030 — the fastest-growing segment. [S2]
  5. The United States accounts for 45% of global data centre electricity consumption (2024); China = 25%, Europe = 15%. [S2]
  6. Google Research's Project Suncatcher proposes placing datacentres in Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) powered entirely by solar energy. [S1]
  7. ISRO is reportedly studying space-based datacentre technology (reported January 2026). [S1]
  8. Microsoft's Fairwater AI datacentre complexes feature petabit-per-second internal links between facilities. [S1]
  9. Unlike traditional data centres (driven by content/video bandwidth), AI data centres require high internal bandwidth (GPU-to-GPU), not external bandwidth to end users. [S1]
  10. Renewables (wind, solar, hydro) currently supply ~27% of electricity consumed by data centres globally. [S2]
  11. Global data centre electricity is projected to reach ~1,200 TWh by 2035. [S2]
  12. IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre) is the nodal body for authorising commercial space activities in India — would regulate any Indian orbital datacentre.
  13. The Outer Space Treaty (1967) establishes that no state may claim sovereignty over outer space — creating jurisdictional ambiguity for orbital compute infrastructure.
  14. India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 governs data localisation — its applicability to orbital datacentres remains unresolved.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Science & Technology — Space Technology; Energy; Infrastructure
GS-III Environment — Sustainable Development, Energy Transition
GS-II International Relations — Technology Geopolitics; India's Space Diplomacy
GS-III Indian Economy — Digital Infrastructure, Data Economy

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "Artificial intelligence is accelerating a global energy crisis centred on data centres. Critically examine the concept of orbital solar-powered datacentres as a solution, with reference to India's strategic interests in space-based compute infrastructure." (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "The rapid expansion of AI data centres poses both an environmental challenge and a geopolitical opportunity. Discuss, with reference to India's National Data Centre Policy and IN-SPACe framework." (GS-III, 10 marks)
  3. "Examine the legal and governance challenges that orbital data centres would pose under existing international space law and India's domestic data protection regime." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Space-Based Solar Power (SBSP) Direct technological precursor to orbital datacentres; India's DST/ISRO SBSP studies are directly relevant
India's Space Economy Policy (2023) & IN-SPACe Regulatory framework under which any Indian orbital datacentre would be authorised
National Data Centre Policy & MeitY Terrestrial counterpart; understanding gaps that orbital datacentres would fill
Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 Data sovereignty implications of off-Earth processing
Outer Space Treaty (1967) & Moon Agreement International legal framework governing orbital assets
AI Governance & Global Frameworks (GPAI, UNESCO AI Ethics) Broader governance of AI infrastructure energy and ethics
India's Net Zero by 2070 Target & NDCs AI energy demand complicates India's climate commitments
Green Hydrogen & Nuclear for Data Centres Competing terrestrial alternatives being explored simultaneously

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing orbital datacentres with Space-Based Solar Power (SBSP): SBSP beams electricity down to Earth; orbital datacentres process compute in space and transmit only data results — fundamentally different architecture.
  2. Attributing ISRO as the implementing agency: ISRO is reportedly studying the concept (Jan 2026); there is no confirmed programme — do not treat it as an operational ISRO project.
  3. Mistaking "Fairwater" as a Google project: Fairwater is Microsoft's AI datacentre complex brand; Project Suncatcher is Google's orbital initiative. [S1]
  4. Overstating data localisation resolution: The DPDP Act 2023 does not explicitly address orbital processing — aspirants should frame this as an unresolved legal question, not a settled one.
  5. Confusing LEO with GEO (geostationary orbit): LEO (~200–2,000 km) is preferred for lower latency and easier solar exposure management; GEO (35,786 km) is used for communications satellites but would introduce ~600ms latency — unsuitable for interactive AI inference.

11. Sources