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Kuva Space awarded €5M
commercial contract to be sole provider of
hyperspectral data services for the Copernicus
program
Finland’s Kuva Space is the world’s only
hyperspectral data service provider to join the
European Commission’s Copernicus Contributing
Missions program (CCM), aiming to provide
complementary Earth observation data to solve some
of the world’s most pressing issues, such as climate
change, carbon capture verification, and food
security.
Finnish Earth observation company Kuva
Space has today been awarded a five-year
commercial contract worth €5M to be the world’s sole
provider of hyperspectral data services for the
European Commission’s Copernicus Contributing
Missions (CCM) program.
Chosen by the European Space Agency, Kuva
Space will demonstrate its proprietary technological
capabilities to monitor farming and aquaculture
crops, forests, methane release, and harmful algae
blooms in seas and coastal areas. Kuva Space's
hyperspectral data services will facilitate the
development of new and accurate commercial services
for Copernicus users and beyond, helping them make
financially smarter and environmentally responsible
decisions related to global issues like food
security, carbon capture, and safety and security.
"We are honored to have been awarded
this opportunity to bring our unique hyperspectral
innovation and expertise to the esteemed Copernicus
community," states Jarkko Antila,
CEO of Kuva Space. "We look forward to closely
collaborating with European Space Agency experts to
validate our data quality and capabilities. This
program represents a remarkable opportunity to help
shape the high standard for hyperspectral data
services within the EU and globally, he
continues.
Kuva Space’s commercial microsatellite
constellation, equipped with a
patented hyperspectral camera,
can capture scientific-grade data on details like
crop types and their health, soil conditions,
biomass, biodiversity, and marine chemical
pollutants, at scale. Leveraging its AI-driven
analytics platform, Kuva Space transforms the
collected data into actionable insights, empowering
users to monitor, identify, and forecast changes and
their impact in near real time.
The availability and usage of hyperspectral
data has previously been limited or non-existent in
Earth observation. With near real-time hyperspectral
data, industries such as agriculture, insurance and
finance, carbon and environment, and safety and
security get access to reliable, verifiable and
robust insights when making decisions.
“The economic viability of generating
continuous, reliable, and affordable hyperspectral
data has been hindered by the large size and high
costs associated with massive spaceborne
hyperspectral instruments. However, Kuva Space's
compact, innovative space and hyperspectral camera
technology have overcome these challenges. We are
seriously committed to improving life on Earth,” continues
Antila.
For example, farmers worldwide are facing
increased vulnerability due to extreme weather
conditions. Kuva Space's hyperspectral imaging can
detect subtle changes in crop health, enabling early
disease detection, pest management, stress
assessment, and damage evaluation with daily
measurements. This contributes to enhancing food
security and productivity, particularly in
developing countries that require crop insurance
policies based on accurate and rapid "proof-of-loss"
assessments. Moreover, the data services provided by
Kuva Space can facilitate effective crop trading
with timely and up-to-date forecasts when setting
prices to trade.
Another example is in the carbon
credit market, which is expected to grow to
around $250 billion by 2050. Kuva Space can offer
frequent hyperspectral measurements that can unlock
the potential of blue carbon capture (carbon
captured by the world's ocean and coastal
ecosystems) and agricultural offsets. By capturing
data frequently, changes in carbon stocks,
vegetation health, and ecosystem dynamics can be
tracked over time.
“With a time-series view of the coastal
and marine ecosystems and agricultural landscapes,
we bring accountability, trust and pricing
transparency to the entire market and fuel its
growth,” says Tuomas Tikka,
CTO and co-founder at Kuva Space.
Kuva Space will launch its Hyperfield-1
microsatellite in November 2023 before launching
four Gen 2 microsatellites in 2024. This will mark
the initial stage of Kuva Space's planned
constellation, which aims to eventually deploy up to
100 satellites by 2030 to measure the material
composition of any target on Earth sub daily,
heightening society’s ability to meet climate and
safety and security challenges.
With local representation in Finland,
Japan, Belgium, the USA, and the UK, Kuva Space has
raised €6.5M in total funding from Reaktor Ventures,
Voima Ventures, Nordic Foodtech VC, VTT Technical
Research Centre of Finland, and public funding from
ESA Philab and Business Finland. The company is
currently raising its Series A round.
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