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Elon Musk unveils $20 billion ‘TeraFab’ chip project to make chips, memory, and package processors all under one roof — targets a terawatt of annual compute

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Why This Matters

Elon Musk's $20 billion TeraFab project aims to revolutionize chip manufacturing by consolidating all production processes under one roof, addressing global supply chain constraints and meeting the soaring demand for AI, robotics, and space computing. This initiative could significantly accelerate chip development cycles and enhance the capabilities of Tesla, SpaceX, and other tech sectors, potentially reshaping the semiconductor industry and advancing humanity's push toward space-based AI infrastructure.

Key Takeaways

Tesla and SpaceX CEO, Elon Musk, announced Saturday night that his TeraFab semiconductor project will be built on the Tesla campus in eastern Travis County, Austin, Texas, as a joint venture between the two companies.

In a livestream broadcast via X, Musk stated that the facility exists because the global chip industry cannot expand quickly enough to meet his projected demand across AI, robotics, and space computing. "That rate is much less than we'd like," Musk said from the defunct Seaholm Power Plant in downtown Austin. "We either build the TeraFab, or we don't have the chips, and we need the chips, so we build the TeraFab." The project reportedly carries a $20 billion price tag.

Announcing TERAFAB: the next step towards becoming a galactic civilization https://t.co/xTA70LOU0eMarch 22, 2026

The Austin fab will house equipment for logic, memory, packaging, testing, and lithography mask production in a single building. Musk claimed that capability does not exist at any other facility in the world, and that having everything under one roof enables a rapid iteration loop: make a chip, test it, revise the mask, and repeat without shipping wafers between sites.

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The facility is expected to produce two types of chips. One will be optimized for edge inference, primarily for Tesla's vehicles and Optimus humanoid robots. The other will be a higher-power chip hardened for the space environment, which Musk says will run hotter than “terrestrial” designs to minimize radiator mass on satellites.

Musk compared the project to the current global output of global AI compute, which he estimated at roughly 20 gigawatts per year. That figure, he said, represents about 2% of his companies’ eventual needs. On the terrestrial side, he projected 100 to 200 gigawatts per year of chip output; the remainder, up to a terawatt, would go to space-based AI compute aboard solar-powered satellites that SpaceX has already petitioned the FCC to launch.

“That's why I think it's probably a hundred to two hundred gigawatts a year of terrestrial chips, and probably on the order of a terawatt of chips in space," noted Musk. "Just because of power constraints on the ground.”

Musk said Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI — which SpaceX acquired in February — will continue buying chips from existing suppliers, including TSMC, Samsung, and Micron, adding that he would like them “to expand as quickly as they can.” He gave no timeline for when the TeraFab would begin producing chips or reach its target output, and while he has previously referenced 2nm as the target process node, he didn’t repeat that figure in the broadcast.

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