Elon Musk’s xAI Colossus 2 is nowhere near 1 gigawatt capacity, satellite imagery suggests — despite claims, site only has 350 megawatts of cooling capacity

Elon Musk's xAI Colossus 2 is nowhere near 1 gigawatt capacity, satellite imagery suggests — despite claims, site only has 350 megawatts of cooling capacity

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(Image credit: xAI) Share Share by: Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Email Share this article 8 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Despite Elon Musk's announcement on Monday that xAI's Colossus 2 data center had reached a 1 GW scale, the supercomputer is not even close to that, a satellite image published by Epoch AI researchers reveals.

Based on 550,000 Nvidia Blackwell AI accelerators, xAI's Colossus 2 is advertised as the industry's first AI facility that consumes one gigawatt of power for AI inference and training. But for now, the data center codenamed 'Macrohard' purportedly only has 350 MW of cooling capacity — not nearly enough to cool down 550,000 Blackwell GPUs at full power, even in winter. As a result, Musk's Jan. 19 announcement may have been premature, to put it mildly. Epoch AI expects the supercomputer to reach 1 GW by May.

xAI's Colossus 2 data center is running, but likely won't reach 1 GW of power until May, despite prior claims by Elon Musk.Our updated analysis shows the facility lacks the cooling capacity to run 550,000 Blackwell GPUs at full power, even in winter conditions. pic.twitter.com/C1mw7e2dDD January 19, 2026

Interestingly, when Grok, xAI's AI bot, was asked about Colossus 2, it confirmed that the launch of the supercomputer may be phased. Furthermore, it recalled media reports claiming that xAI may be using unpermitted gas turbines for extra power.

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At the pace that Colossus 2 is being equipped with cooling systems right now, the new supercomputer will become a gigawatt-class machine sometime in May, according to the research. Meanwhile, the machine was once predicted to use a million GPUs, and then Musk said that it could scale to 1.5 GW or even 2 GW when the time comes. When this could happen is not known because xAI needs to get enough AI servers, procure enough power, and then get cooling systems.

Even though xAI's Colossus 2 will hit its 1 GW milestone later than expected, it is still projected to be ahead of rivals from Amazon and OpenAI, according to a graph by Epoch AI . The company will have more resources for AI training, AI inference, and agentic AI workloads than its rival for some time.

The Colossus 2 supercomputer for @Grok is now operational. First Gigawatt training cluster in the world. Upgrades to 1.5GW in April. https://t.co/GpgZ6Pe30s January 17, 2026

Based on the graph's reference lines, the power consumption of the whole city of San Diego averages ~800 MW, Amsterdam consumes around ~1.6 GW, and the power consumption of Los Angeles is about ~2.4 GW, which puts modern frontier AI data centers in the same class as major cities. When fully equipped and ramped, xAI Colossus 2 at roughly 1.3 GW – 1.4 GW, would consume about 1.7× San Diego's power, slightly less than Amsterdam, and around 60% of Los Angeles.

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