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Kepler
Selects NanoAvionics as preferred
European partner for optically-connected
missions
17 Feb. 2026
Kepler
Communications has chosen Kongsberg
NanoAvionics as the preferred European
satellite bus provider for its hosted
payload initiatives aboard spacecraft up
to 500kg in mass. The non-exclusive
preferential partnership is for missions
requiring seamless access to The Kepler
Network. It is also aimed at satellite
operators seeking to transition to
faster and more secure optical
communications built on the US Space
Development Agency’s (SDA) standards.
Through a Kepler
service capacity commitment,
NanoAvionics will start offering its own
customers access to Kepler’s optical
data relay network and on-orbit compute
services as an optional feature within
its portfolio of inter-satellite link
solutions. This will provide
NanoAvionics’ customers with a
competitive advantage through access to
low-latency, near-real-time, and high
data throughput. These capabilities will
be offered first on NanoAvionics MP42
microsatellite and followed by its
CubeSat platforms, using different
Optical Inter-Satellite Links (OISL).
They will be capable of up to sub-second
2.5 Gbps connectivity and terabytes of
data volume per day as a standard
feature.
Through this
agreement with NanoAvionics, Kepler aims
to expand its market reach and enable
simple and riskless adoption of optical
communications. With this step, the two
companies respond to the industry’s
urgent need for higher bandwidth, lower
latency, and secure, interoperable data
transfer across terrestrial and
space-based networks.
As the Kepler
Network scales to 100 Gbps-class
capacity with its next tranche of
satellites, NanoAvionics will receive
priority consideration, subject to
availability and mutually agreed
commercial terms, to access higher data
rates, ensuring its platforms remain at
the forefront of next-generation mission
performance.
“NanoAvionics has
earned a reputation for being one of the
most reliable bus providers, helping
customers with demanding mission
requirements scale quickly and with
confidence. This collaboration
accelerates the shift toward space
systems that operate in real time and on
demand,” said Mina Mitry, CEO and
Co-Founder of Kepler Communications. “By
integrating our optical network and
on-orbit compute services with
NanoAvionics’ platforms, we are enabling
the transformation of space from a
store-and-forward model to a responsive
environment that supports time-critical,
dynamically tasked missions.
Atle Wøllo, CEO of
NanoAvionics said: “Through this
cooperation with Kepler, we are
positioning NanoAvionics at the
forefront of the industry’s adoption of
optical communications. It allows us to
offer transmission technology that is
becoming essential for timely decision
making. This industry wide move can
provide an exponential boost for
sovereign national security missions and
for commercial operators serving
time-sensitive data for civil,
commercial, and security needs.
“The satellite
market is entering a new phase of
accelerated competition. In this new
environment, next generation
communications performance with near
real-time analytics, enabled by AI and
edge processing, will determine who is
leading the market.”
This partnership
comes on the back of Kepler’s successful
launch of the first tranche of its
optical relay satellites in January of
2026. It brought the company on track to
achieve Initial Operating Capability
(IOC) for its optical network in early
2026. With this network, Kepler will
become a critical enabler of ultra-low
latency data transport, real-time
tasking, and advanced on-orbit computing
for the satellite missions that will
define the next decade.
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