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Finnish Startup ReOrbit Raises Record €45 Million to Empower Sovereign Satellite Operations

Record Funding in an Evolving Geopolitical Landscape

Helsinki-based ReOrbit has set a new benchmark in European space technology by raising a record €45 million (approximately US $53 million) in its Series A funding round. This capital injection underscores a growing shift among nations, driven by heightened concerns over dependency on foreign technologies for critical infrastructure, toward achieving complete sovereignty in satellite operations.

Innovative Satellite Solutions for National Sovereignty

Founded in 2019, ReOrbit offers an integrated suite of hardware and software solutions that empower countries to manage their own sovereign satellites. CEO Sethu Saveda Suvanam explains that their platform provides a cost-effective alternative to commercial offerings such as Elon Musk’s Starlink, enabling nations to maintain full control over their communication assets. The analogy of comparing their software core to Apple’s iOS highlights its versatility, capable of managing both geostationary satellites like SiltaSat and low Earth orbit satellites such as UkkoSat.

Strategic Growth and Global Partnerships

ReOrbit’s unique market positioning has already attracted significant contracts, including a multi-hundred-million-euro deal with one nation and several memoranda of understanding with other government entities. Although these contracts could have allowed the company to operate without external funding, the capital infusion is seen as a catalyst for accelerated growth. Saveda Suvanam envisions ReOrbit evolving into a sales unicorn within the next four years, targeting €1 billion in order books.

Robust Nordic Backing and European Collaborations

The record-sized funding round was orchestrated by Springvest, a Finnish firm specializing in crowdsourced public offerings for private companies. Finnish and Nordic investors, including Varma, Elo, Icebreaker.vc, Expansion VC, 10x Founders, and Inventure, contributed to this impressive round, further reinforcing Finland’s reputation as a favorable regulatory environment for space ventures—a sentiment echoed by the successes of companies like ICEYE.

Future Ambitions and In-Orbit Demonstrations

With a forward-looking vision, ReOrbit is set to build a satellite for an in-orbit demonstration in collaboration with the European Space Agency, slated for launch in the second quarter of next year. As geopolitical tensions and the recognition of space technology’s critical role in national defense continue to grow, ReOrbit is uniquely positioned to offer nations a neutral alternative amid the complexities of global power dynamics.

Cyprus Moves To Unlock More Solar Power With First Large-Scale Battery Storage Contracts

Cyprus is preparing to sign the first contracts for large-scale electricity storage batteries on Tuesday, a project expected to improve the grid’s ability to manage growing renewable energy production and reduce the curtailment of solar power.

A Long-Awaited Grid Fix

Energy Minister Michalis Damianos said the agreements will cover 120MW of centralised storage capacity that will be managed by the transmission system operator. The project, valued at €50 million, is expected to deliver the batteries in January 2027, with installation scheduled to take place over the following two to three months.

According to Damianos, the system should become operational by the summer of 2027, a period when both electricity demand and solar generation typically peak. He said the storage facilities will allow energy currently lost due to a lack of storage capacity to be retained and used when needed.

Why Storage Has Become Essential

The batteries are designed to absorb excess renewable electricity during periods of overproduction and release it back into the system when demand increases. Their introduction is expected to reduce the curtailments currently affecting solar generators and improve the use of renewable energy already being produced across the island.

Former Energy Minister George Papanastasiou told Sigma that planning for the project began in 2023 in cooperation with the European Commission. The objective was to address growing losses from renewable energy generation that the electricity network cannot currently absorb.

By the end of May 2026, approximately 160,000 megawatt hours of renewable energy had been lost through curtailments affecting residential photovoltaic systems, commercial solar parks, and wind installations. According to Papanastasiou, renewable electricity production exceeds demand during several hours of the day, leaving part of the output unable to be utilised.

The Cost Of Growing Faster Than The Grid

The challenge has become more pronounced as renewable generation capacity has expanded faster than the infrastructure required to manage surplus electricity. Data from the distribution system operator show that around 306 gigawatt hours of renewable energy were curtailed in 2025, compared with approximately 167 gigawatt hours a year earlier.

Papanastasiou acknowledged criticism that storage deployment has not kept pace with the growth of renewable energy projects, although he noted that regulatory and financing challenges slowed implementation. He added that the development of storage and generation capacity needs to progress in parallel, a challenge faced by many energy markets.

Private Capital Is Also Entering The Market

The state-backed battery installation forms part of a broader expansion of energy storage capacity across Cyprus. Alongside the project managed by the transmission system operator, the Electricity Authority of Cyprus (EAC) and private developers are advancing their own investments.

Current figures show 36 applications for battery storage projects with a combined requested capacity of approximately 925MW. The EAC has submitted applications for storage facilities in Dhekelia and Moni with a combined capacity of 180MW, while private-sector projects exceeding 150MW have progressed through various stages of the approval process.

Grid Stability Comes First

According to Papanastasiou, the state-owned battery system will primarily serve grid stability and energy security objectives rather than operate as a commercial trading asset. The facilities will store electricity during periods of surplus generation and release it when demand rises or when supply pressures emerge.

Privately operated storage projects could also contribute to the market by storing lower-cost renewable electricity and dispatching it later when demand and prices are higher.

As renewable energy continues to account for a larger share of Cyprus’ electricity mix, storage infrastructure is expected to play an increasingly important role in balancing supply and demand, reducing curtailments, and improving the overall efficiency of the power system.

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