Elon Musk just dropped a bombshell at Tesla’s latest shareholder meeting: a massive, self-sustaining factory that floats on the Pacific. Dubbed the “AquaGig,” this solar-powered behemoth churns out 10,000 Cybertrucks a month while drifting beyond national waters, free from regulations. Musk boasted, “Land’s overrated—our future is on the waves,” sparking a frenzy of awe and outrage.
The factory’s design borrows from SpaceX’s Starship hulls, with watertight compartments and a desalination plant powered by Tesla’s megabatteries. Workers live onboard in luxe pods, connected by Starlink, while drones ferry parts from shore. Environmentalists decry it as a “floating polluter,” but Musk claims it’s carbon-negative, recycling ocean plastic into vehicle frames—a bold flex of his green credentials.
X users are calling it Musk’s pirate kingdom, with memes of him steering the helm in a Tesla-branded captain’s hat. Rivals like Ford are scrambling to catch up, but the AquaGig’s first shipment—due next spring—could flood the market and sink competitors. Is this Musk’s wildest innovation yet, or a watery gamble that’ll capsize his empire?
