Silicon Valley sinks hundreds of millions of dollars into offshore AI data centers: powered by ocean-wave electricity generation and cooling, with backing from heavyweights such as Peter Thiel and others

Portland startup Panthalassa completes $140 million Series B funding, led by Peter Thiel, with follow-on investments from heavy Silicon Valley investors including Marc Benioff, Max Levchin, and others. The company plans to deploy floating AI computing nodes powered by wave energy in the North Pacific.
(Background: Elon Musk said space AI data centers are “bound to happen,” while SpaceX’s IPO warns it may not go forward)
(Additional context: The first in the U.S.: Maine proposes banning large data centers amid rising public concern over AI’s high energy consumption)

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  • Wave-Driven Computing Power
  • Ten Years of Prototypes, Three Generations of Testing, Commercialization Not Until 2027
  • Offshore vs. Onshore: Power Grid Bottlenecks Are Forcing Computing to the Edge

A giant steel sphere floating on the sea, with a vertical pipe extending from its bottom, is a technology route Panthalassa has been testing in the Pacific for ten years.

This week, the Portland-based public benefit corporation announced it has completed $140 million in Series B funding, led by Peter Thiel, with co-investors including John Doerr, TIME Ventures (Marc Benioff’s fund), SciFi Ventures (Max Levchin’s fund), Susquehanna, server manufacturer Super Micro Computer, Sozo Ventures, and others.

Currently, Silicon Valley is pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into the “offshore AI data center” concept.

Wave-Driven Computing Power

Traditional thinking is to send electricity from power plants to data centers; Panthalassa’s approach is to move the computing power next to the energy source, then send the results back via satellite. Instead of long-distance electrical transmission, data travels long distances, and the marginal cost of data transfer is much cheaper than cross-sea power lines.

Each “wave-driven node” is a self-sufficient unit: waves generate electricity, seawater provides cooling, and satellites offer communication channels. After the AI model is transmitted from land to the node, it processes inference requests offshore, and the results are sent back via satellite to clients. The entire process does not rely on land power grids or the construction of substations or new transmission lines onshore.

Cooling is also the most direct structural advantage of offshore computing. Land data centers require significant electricity and freshwater to keep servers at safe temperatures; ocean environments are naturally cooler, making this aspect nearly cost-free in design.

Given that current large-scale data centers often spend about 30% of their power on cooling, this difference could lead to a fundamental cost restructuring.

Ten Years of Prototypes, Three Generations of Testing, Commercialization Not Until 2027

Panthalassa is not a startup just starting out. Since its founding in 2016, the team has tested three generations of prototypes offshore, each validating different engineering hypotheses: the stability of wave power generation, the durability of nodes in harsh sea conditions, and the latency and bandwidth limits of satellite communication.

The specific use of the current Series B funds, according to official press releases, is divided into two directions: one is to complete the construction of a pilot factory near Portland for scaled hardware production; the other is to accelerate deployment of the third-generation commercial node, Ocean-3. According to plans, Ocean-3 will be deployed in the North Pacific in 2026 and officially enter commercial operation in 2027.

However, experts also warn that executing AI inference offshore means models must first be transmitted to the offshore nodes, then continuously respond to requests from land. Larger models entail higher initial transmission costs; if the number of nodes is large and distributed widely, model synchronization and version management become increasingly complex.

These are not insurmountable problems, but they are additional engineering challenges that land-based data centers do not face.

Offshore vs. Onshore: Power Grid Bottlenecks Are Forcing Computing to the Edge

Panthalassa’s focus on the ocean reflects the systemic rise in political and infrastructure pressures on land-based site selection.

Recently, Maine enacted the nation’s first ban on large data center construction, citing the visible impact of AI training and inference on local power grids and residents’ lives. Similar public concerns are brewing in other U.S. states and parts of Europe, prompting potential legislation.

The investor list itself signals this trend. Thiel, Doerr, Levchin, Field—these names in Silicon Valley are not just financiers but also market endorsements for a long-term bet on this technological direction.

Wave energy itself is not a new technology, but coupling it directly with AI inference computing power, bypassing the power grid as an intermediary, is what Panthalassa is truly doing. Whether they can deliver measurable commercial results by 2027 will determine if this route is the next-generation computing infrastructure or just a carefully crafted financing narrative.

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