Opinion | US-China orbital arms race is forging a trillion-dollar space economy
While the private sector seeks the next trillion-dollar breakthrough, national governments race to secure the orbital assets that now underpin modern deterrence

If the years 2020 to 2025 were defined by the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution – a period where algorithms helped create tech titans such as Nvidia, OpenAI and Oracle – then 2026 represents a far more exciting and expansive paradigm shift.
Still, beyond the ticker symbols lies a new reality executed by the fusion of SpaceX and the AI start-up xAI. This new ecosystem represents the ultimate frontier, where the boundaries between orbital connectivity and AI infrastructure and application merge into a single trillion-dollar future.
This is no longer merely a race for market share; it is a dual-track competition where private innovation and military strategy have become inextricably linked. While the private sector builds the infrastructure for an emerging orbital economy, national governments increasingly view these commercial networks as the digital high ground.
In this new era, the space race is fought on two fronts. One is by CEOs and venture capitalists seeking the next trillion-dollar breakthrough, and the other is by defence departments securing the orbital assets that now underpin modern deterrence.

