Alphabet (GOOGL) Stock: Google Eyes SpaceX Partnership for Orbital Data Center Project

Table of Contents Alphabet has publicly acknowledged that it is engaged in preliminary discussions with SpaceX concerning potential launch partnerships for Project Suncatcher, an experimental program focused on establishing solar-powered data centers in Earth’s orbit. JUST IN: Google $GOOGL in talks with Elon Musk's SpaceX to launch data centers in space. pic.twitter.com/uSn8UKPNbi — Watcher.Guru (@WatcherGuru) May 12, 2026 The initial report emerged from The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday. While Google verified that conversations with SpaceX and other launch providers are underway, the company declined to elaborate on specifics. SpaceX has remained silent on the matter, not responding to media inquiries. Project Suncatcher represents Google’s strategic effort to link satellites equipped with proprietary Tensor Processing Units into a unified orbital AI computing environment. The tech giant intends to test this concept through a prototype mission in partnership with Planet Labs, targeting a launch timeframe around 2027. Alphabet Inc., GOOGL Shares of Alphabet (GOOGL) declined by 0.16% on Tuesday following the announcement. This marks the second instance where Musk has pursued collaboration with an AI competitor he’s openly challenged. After SpaceX’s February merger with xAI, the company entered direct competition with Alphabet’s AI operations. Musk initially co-founded OpenAI in 2015, in part to counterbalance Google’s artificial intelligence initiatives, after a disagreement with co-founder Larry Page regarding AI safety protocols. The financial feasibility of orbital data centers relies substantially on Starship’s capabilities. The massive rocket exceeds 400 feet in height and features complete reusability. SpaceX projects that Starship will decrease the expense of accessing low Earth orbit by up to 90% relative to Falcon 9 — which already reduced launch costs by approximately 95% when compared to the retired Space Shuttle program. Another Starship test flight is on the schedule for this week. SpaceX presently conducts more than half of all orbital missions globally. Musk has publicly stated his conviction that space-based computing facilities will achieve cost parity with terrestrial data centers within several years. Funding this expansion is among the primary motivations behind SpaceX’s anticipated IPO in mid-2025, potentially valuing the aerospace company at $2 trillion. Alphabet isn’t the only tech player exploring SpaceX partnerships. Just last week, Anthropic finalized an agreement to utilize the complete computing resources of SpaceX’s Colossus 1 data center located in Memphis. Anthropic has also communicated interest in collaborating with SpaceX on developing multiple gigawatts of orbital data center capacity. Notably, SpaceX is presently providing launch services for Amazon’s satellite broadband network — a direct rival to its own Starlink service, which now serves over 10 million customers. Historically, SpaceX has refrained from leveraging its launch market dominance to exclude competitors. The emerging pattern is clear: SpaceX is establishing itself as essential launch infrastructure for the expanding AI and satellite sectors, independent of competitive tensions in other business areas. Alphabet’s confirmed participation in these discussions lends credibility to the orbital data center concept that forms a substantial component of SpaceX’s valuation projections ahead of its forthcoming public offering.