Top News

Pixxel, Sarvam plan orbital data centre after Agnikul Cosmos-Neev Cloud
ETtech | May 4, 2026 10:19 PM CST

Synopsis

Indian space company Pixxel and AI firm Sarvam are collaborating on a groundbreaking orbital data centre satellite. This satellite, named Pathfinder, will process vast amounts of space-based data directly in orbit using advanced AI models. This innovation promises real-time insights for environmental monitoring and resource management, reducing reliance on ground infrastructure and enhancing data sovereignty.

Pixxel and Sarvam on Monday announced plans to build an orbital data centre satellite, joining a global rush to build space-based computing infrastructure after Agnikul Cosmos and NeevCloud announced a similar initiative in February.

Assembly Elections 2026

Election Results 2026 Live Updates: Who's ahead in which state

West Bengal Election Results 2026 Live Updates

TN Election Result 2026 Live Updates

The ‘Pathfinder’ satellite, expected to launch as early as the fourth quarter of 2026, will carry data centre-grade GPUs and full-stack artificial intelligence (AI) models into orbit, enabling both training and inference directly in space, Pixxel and Sarvam said.

Unlike conventional satellites that transmit raw data back to earth, the system is designed to process and analyse information in orbit, significantly reducing latency and bandwidth requirements. It will also integrate hyperspectral imaging capabilities, allowing real-time insights for applications such as environmental monitoring, resource management and infrastructure tracking.


The move comes amid rising interest in orbital data centres, a concept gaining traction globally as demand for AI compute surges.

“Ground-based data centres are facing increasing constraints around energy, land, regulation, and scale,” said Awais Ahmed, chief executive of space-tech startup Pixxel. Space-based compute could tap abundant solar energy while operating closer to data sources, he noted.

AI company’s Sarvam’s chief executive Pratyush Kumar said running India-built AI models on an India-built satellite represents a key step toward sovereign AI infrastructure extending into space, reducing dependence on foreign cloud systems.

Launch startup Agnikul Cosmos, is also positioning itself as an enabler of orbital infrastructure, with its small-lift rockets designed to deploy and refresh constellations that could eventually host compute payloads.

NeevCloud is exploring distributed cloud architectures spanning earth and orbit, focusing on integrating AI workloads with satellite-based systems to enable low-latency inference and resilient compute networks.

Together, these efforts signal an emerging domestic push toward space-based compute as a strategic layer, particularly in the context of data sovereignty and defence applications.

Globally, Google has explored space-based AI infrastructure under its Project Suncatcher, which looks at using continuous solar energy in orbit to power compute systems more sustainably.

Separately, Elon Musk has floated the idea of hosting data centres in space as part of the broader vision around SpaceX and its satellite ecosystem, potentially integrating compute capabilities with communications networks such as Starlink.

Though many of these initiatives remain at the conceptual or research stage, they reflect a growing consensus that future AI infrastructure may extend beyond earth.

Industry executives said the shift marks a transition from satellites acting merely as sensors to becoming active compute nodes.

By processing data closer to the source, orbital systems can enable faster decision-making, reduce dependence on ground infrastructure, and unlock new use cases in defence, climate monitoring, disaster response and telecommunications.

Pixxel’s Pathfinder mission is expected to serve as a technology demonstrator, validating performance, power management and real-time AI workflows in space, and laying the groundwork for scalable orbital data centre networks.

If successful, it could position India among the early movers in what is shaping up to be the next frontier of AI infrastructure: data centres in orbit.


READ NEXT
Cancel OK