SatVu lands £30M to scale thermal imaging satellite network
UK-based Earth observation startup SatVu has raised £30 million in fresh funding to accelerate the build-out of its thermal imaging satellite constellation, in a round led by the NATO Innovation Fund. The capital will be used to launch additional spacecraft, expand data analytics capabilities and deepen partnerships across climate, defence and infrastructure markets.
Thermal imaging from space for climate and security
SatVu is developing a constellation of high-resolution thermal imaging satellites designed to measure heat signatures on Earth in near real time. By capturing precise data on how buildings, industrial sites and critical infrastructure emit heat, the company aims to provide actionable insights on energy efficiency, carbon emissions and climate risk.
The technology also has clear applications for defence and national security, including monitoring of military activity, detection of anomalous heat sources and support for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance operations. The involvement of the NATO Innovation Fund underscores the strategic value of thermal Earth observation in future security architectures.
Strategic backing to build a global constellation
The £30 million round, which also attracted participation from existing and new institutional investors, will support the manufacturing and launch of additional satellites to join SatVu‘s first pathfinder spacecraft. A denser constellation is expected to deliver higher revisit rates, enabling customers to track changes in heat signatures multiple times per day.
By combining orbital sensors with advanced data analytics and AI algorithms, SatVu plans to offer decision-ready intelligence to governments, asset managers, insurers and energy-intensive industries. Use cases range from verifying ESG reporting and detecting industrial leaks to assessing grid resilience and supporting disaster response.
Positioning as a key player in space-based climate intelligence
With this funding, SatVu strengthens its position in the fast-growing market for space-based climate intelligence. As regulators, investors and defence alliances demand more reliable, independent data on how assets perform in the real world, thermal imagery from orbit is emerging as a critical layer of evidence.
The backing from the NATO Innovation Fund signals confidence that SatVu‘s technology can serve both public and private sector needs, bridging commercial sustainability goals with broader security and resilience priorities.

