Thales Alenia Space
reveals results of ASCEND feasibility study on space
data centers
June 27, 2024
Thales Alenia Space announced
the promising results of the ASCEND (Advanced Space
Cloud for European Net zero emission and Data
sovereignty) feasibility study. Launched in
2023 and funded by the European Commission under the
Horizon Europe program, this initiative aims to
study the feasibility of space-based data centers to
work toward the EU Green Deal’s objective of
net-zero carbon by 2050 and transform the European
space and digital ecosystem.
For this study, Thales Alenia
Space coordinated a European consortium of partners
with
complementary expertise in environmental aspects
(Carbone 4, VITO), cloud computing (Orange Business,
CloudFerro, Hewlett Packard Enterprise), launchers
(ArianeGroup), and orbital systems (German space
agency DLR, Airbus Defence & Space, and Thales
Alenia Space).
A project within Europe’s reach
The purpose of the ASCEND study
was to compare the environmental impacts of
space-based and Earth-based data centers. It was
also intended to validate the technological
feasibility of developing, deploying and operating
such centers in orbit. In order to significantly
reduce the CO2 emissions generated by the processing
and storage of digital, the results of the study
estimate that such space infrastructures would
require the development of a launcher ten times less
emissive over its entire lifecycle. Moreover, space
data centers would not require water to cool them, a
key advantage in times of increasing drought.
Curbing the energy and
environment impacts of data centers could kick-start
major investments within the framework of the EU
Green Deal, potentially justifying the development
of a high-capacity, eco-designed and reusable
launcher. Thanks to ArianeGroup’s contribution and
to analytics from ESA’s PROTEIN feasibility study,
ASCEND validated the feasibility of a launcher
capable of conducting multiple launches while
mitigating their carbon footprint.
Modular space infrastructures
would be assembled in orbit using robotic
technologies from the European Commission’s EROSS
IOD (European Robotic Orbital Support Services In
Orbit Demonstrator) led by Thales Alenia Space,
scheduled to fly its first mission in 2026. This
would enable Europe to restore its leadership in
transportation, space logistics and assembly of
large in-orbit infrastructures.
Funded by the European Union
Ensuring Europe’s digital
sovereignty
The ASCEND project could
contribute to Europe’s digital sovereignty, reducing
its digital carbon footprint while ensuring data
security for citizens and businesses alike. The
market for data centers by 2030 is estimated at 23
gigawatts of capacity; ASCEND aims to deploy one
gigawatt before 2050. The results of the study also
confirm the project’s economic viability, offering a
prospect of a return on investment of several
billion euros between now and 2050.
“The results of the ASCEND
study confirm that deploying data centers in space
could transform
the European digital landscape, offering a more
eco-friendly and sovereign solution for hosting and
processing data. We’re proud to be contributing to
an initiative supporting Europe’s net[1]zero
objectives and strengthening its technological
sovereignty.” said Christophe Valorge, Chief
Technical Officer, Thales Alenia Space.
Thales Alenia Space and its
partners now intend to pursue the ASCEND feasibility
study to consolidate and optimize its results. At
the same time, a paradigm shift within the space
sector is required to accomplish the project’s
goals, leveraging technologies that are within reach
for Europe.
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