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Health, Aviation, Automobiles, Entrepreneurs, India, Technology, Luxury | The HinduBusinessLine

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Feeding a global hunger for satellite data
By Jyoti Banthia · 2026-05-25 · via Health, Aviation, Automobiles, Entrepreneurs, India, Technology, Luxury | The HinduBusinessLine
Awais Ahmed, Founder and CEO, Pixxel

Awais Ahmed, Founder and CEO, Pixxel | Photo Credit: Ore Huiying

India’s private space-tech sector is scaling up commercially as startups expand satellite constellations and win global customers looking for geospatial intelligence across applications spanning the agriculture, mining, climate monitoring, oil and gas, maritime surveillance and defence sectors.

From hyperspectral imaging startup Pixxel to earth observation technology developer GalaxEye and satellite launch vehicle maker Agnikul Cosmos, Indian firms are increasingly positioning themselves as providers of critical geospatial intelligence infrastructure.

The momentum is reflected in investor appetite. The private space-tech ecosystem attracted $120-150 million funding in 2025 amid rising commercialisation of services and growing international demand for earth observation capabilities.

“A significant share of demand comes from North America, Europe, and parts of the Middle East,” says Awais Ahmed. Pixxel’s founder-CEO.

“Organisations are looking for advanced earth observation capabilities, especially where traditional satellite imagery is no longer sufficient.” Pixxel works with more than 75 enterprise customers globally, including mining giant Rio Tinto and agritech company DataFarming, alongside more than 80 global partners.

Ahmed says the market is evolving rapidly. “Demand is shifting from imagery consumption to decision intelligence. Customers want faster, more actionable insights that can directly influence operations, risk assessment, and long-term planning.”

In response to this demand, Indian startups are expanding their orbital infrastructure.

Srinath Ravichandran, Co-founder and CEO, A gnikul Cosmo

Srinath Ravichandran, Co-founder and CEO, A gnikul Cosmo | Photo Credit: Ore Huiying

Pixxel plans to deploy more than 25 satellites over the next few years to enable near real-time monitoring and higher ‘revisit frequencies’ — consecutive observations of the exact same geographic location by a satellite system. “As revisit rates improve, hyperspectral data becomes more valuable because customers can continuously track change rather than rely on isolated observations,” Ahmed says.

Monitoring systems

Satellite data usage is widening beyond traditional mapping and surveillance.

In agriculture, satellite intelligence is increasingly used for crop monitoring, stress detection, yield prediction and insurance underwriting. In the mining and oil and gas sectors, satellite imagery is used for environmental compliance, pipeline monitoring and infrastructure tracking. Climate-focused applications such as methane detection, water quality analysis and forest monitoring are also seeing rapid adoption globally.

GalaxEye founder-CEO Suyash Singh says the defence and intelligence sectors remain the largest users of satellite data globally, even as commercial demand is surging.

“Large enterprises are turning to satellite-based monitoring to manage vast and remote assets more efficiently and cost-effectively compared to traditional aerial surveys,” he explains.

GalaxEye, which is building multi-sensor imaging systems combining optical and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) capabilities, plans to deploy 15-20 satellites by the end of the decade.

This would enable global revisit rates every three to four hours, dramatically improving analytics capabilities and commercial viability, the company says.

“Higher revisits also strengthen the AI insights that can be built on top of the imagery,” Singh says.

The broader transition of satellite systems, founders say, is from passive earth observation to persistent intelligence systems.

“Satellites are becoming systems that continuously monitor environmental, industrial, and geopolitical change at scale,” says Ahmed.

Stratospheric gap

The opportunity is not limited to orbital systems. Red Balloon Aerospace, which operates in the near-space stratospheric layer 20–50 km above earth, is building recoverable high-altitude platforms for persistent monitoring.

“A meaningful share of our early pipeline is international — the demand for persistent, low-cost stratospheric coverage is a global infrastructure gap,” says CVS Kiran, co-founder and CEO of Red Balloon Aerospace.

The startup’s first VISTA super-pressure balloon launch is scheduled for Q2 2026 and will carry both international and domestic payloads.

Investor backing

The heightened commercial demand is forcing a change in how investors evaluate Indian space-tech firms from the time when the country’s space sector was first opened to private players in 2020.

Investors now focus heavily on flight heritage, manufacturing capability, commercial contracts and deployment scale. “Commercial deployments, satellite launches, and real customer adoption validate that these technologies are evolving into reliable infrastructure businesses rather than experimental projects,” Ahmed says.

Singh echoes this. “Global contracts and commercial deployments have helped improve investor confidence and customer trust in Indian startups,” he says, adding that many of the private space-tech ventures are transitioning from R&D-heavy operations to full-scale commercial deployment.

Agnikul Cosmos is seeing a growing demand from global constellation operators looking for dedicated launch services instead of ride-share missions. “Space is an international market — we are always building for the world, from India,” says Srinath Ravichandran, co-founder-CEO of Agnikul Cosmos.

The company recently raised $17 million at a valuation exceeding $500 million. Ravichandran says investors are now evaluating deeper operational metrics rather than merely backing ambitious concepts. “The conditions for scale are increasingly in place. What matters now is execution depth,” he says.

Agnikul is seeing demand for its launch services from operators across Europe and Australia, while newer use-cases such as space-based data centres and rapid launch systems are emerging as future commercial opportunities.

Industry founders believe that given India’s combination of engineering talent and lower-cost execution, space data could evolve into one of the biggest deep-tech export opportunities in the next decade.

Published on May 25, 2026