SatVu Declares HotSat-2 Start of Commercial Operations: High Fidelity Thermal Intelligence Reveals Hidden Activity Across Critical Infrastructure Worldwide

SatVu today announced the Start of Commercial Operations (SCO) for HotSat-2, marking the beginning of routine tasking and delivery of commercial thermal intelligence products to customers worldwide.

The milestone marks SatVu's evolution from technology demonstration to operational delivery, providing Defence & Intelligence, Economic Intelligence and Climate Resilience industry sector users with decision-grade, independent thermal intelligence that reveals an asset’s operational reality: is it on or off, hot or not.

SatVu delivers confidence: the highest-fidelity, commercial, space-based thermal intelligence, completing the GEOINT picture. SatVu customers complete their EO and SAR observation workflow with thermal-derived activity intelligence, revealing operational heartbeat: status, intensity, and change.

Market demand for HotSat data is strong and growing. SatVu has secured contracts and strategic investment from some of the most established and influential organisations in the defence, intelligence, and commercial sectors, reinforcing its position as the trusted source of decision-grade, high fidelity thermal intelligence.

This growing adoption includes a commercial agreement with Kongsberg, one of the world's leading defence and aerospace technology companies, which is using SatVu's thermal data capabilities as part of its broader geospatial and intelligence offerings.

Anthony Baker, CEO and Co-Founder of SatVu, said: “Start of Commercial Operations is the point in time when customers are no longer evaluating thermal data as an emerging technology - they are integrating it into operational workflows that support strategic decision making.

HotSat-2 SCO begins our ability to deliver that data at scale. It enables customers to access independent, high fidelity thermal intelligence that reveals the operational reality of critical assets around the world.”

The Start of Commercial Operations follows the successful launch of HotSat-2 in March and comes as thermal intelligence increasingly demonstrates value across three critical sectors: Defence Intelligence, Economic Intelligence and Climate Resilience.

Recent imagery collected by HotSat-2 highlights how thermal data can reveal activity that would otherwise remain hidden:

  • Santiago de Cuba, Cuba: SatVu observed thermal activity at one of the country's most strategically important oil refining facilities a full two days before the official announcement of the same by the Cuban authorities. At a time when energy shortages, fuel scarcity, and widespread power outages are placing significant strain on the island’s energy system, thermal intelligence provides an independent means of identifying previously unseen activity and assessing operations at infrastructure that is otherwise difficult to monitor.

  • Secunda, South Africa: Imagery of the Sasol Secunda complex reveals the operational status of one of the world's largest synthetic fuel and chemicals facilities. As a critical component of South Africa's energy and contributing 8% of South Africa’s GDP, and the world's largest single-point source of carbon emissions, Secunda is closely watched by governments, investors, traders and environmental stakeholders. Thermal signatures across the site provide an independent indicator of industrial activity and utilisation, enabling analysts to assess operational performance, economic output and environmental impact.

  • Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi, Arabia: Urban environments retain heat far more efficiently than natural landscapes, increasing exposure to heat as a result of rising global temperatures. HotSat-2 imagery of Riyadh at night highlights how the city’s road network stores and radiates heat, illustrating the challenges faced by rapidly growing cities in hotter climates. SatVu’s high-resolution thermal intelligence can help planners measure the effectiveness of urban heat mitigation efforts, from reflective surfaces and green corridors to improved materials and cooling strategies, providing clear evidence of what works and where further action is needed.

Together, these examples demonstrate how high fidelity, decision-grade thermal intelligence is becoming an increasingly important source of independent information across Defence & Intelligence, Economic Intelligence and Climate Resilience applications.

As governments and industry seek faster, more reliable verification of activity across critical infrastructure and strategic locations, high fidelity thermal intelligence has emerged as a vital component of modern monitoring and decision-support systems.

The commencement of HotSat-2 commercial operations enables customers to task imagery, access operational data delivery, integrate thermal intelligence into existing workflows and scale adoption through the SatVu platform, APIs and enterprise services.

Next
Next

Gilat Receives $43 Million of Additional Sidewinder ESA Orders from Leading In-flight Connectivity Service Provider