ST. LOUIS – Hyperspectral imagery startup Kuva Space is expanding its focus on maritime-domain awareness and preparing to launch its second satellite in June.
Kuva has delivered Hyperfield-1B, a six-unit cubesat, Vandenberg Space Force Base in California for launch on the next SpaceX Falcon 9 rideshare. Additionall Hyperfield satellites slated to begin launching in 2026 will be significant larger.
Kuva is building a 100-satellite constellation to provide “almost real-time measurement by the end of the decade,” Kuva CEO Jarkko Antila told SpaceNews at the GEOINT Symposium 2025.
Over the Arctic, for example, Kuva will offer customers the ability to revisit sites of interest tens of times per day.
Promising Applications
Dark vessel detection will be a key application for Kuva’s constellation. Hyperspectral imagery from Hyperfield-1B and its successors will help Kuva identify vessels that have turned off their automated identification systems (AIS) in vast areas like the South China Sea. By querying the dataset, Kuva will be able to trace the path the vessel traveled before turning off its identification beacon, Antila said.
In addition, Kuva’s hyperspectral data will have important applications for agriculture, aquaculture and crop-yield forecasts.
Satellite Upgrades
The European Space Agency provided funding for Kuva’s Hyperfield-1B satellite through InCubed, a program focused on building products and services to exploit Earth-observation datasets. Beyond Hyperfield-1B, Kuva is building 60-kilogram satellites equipped with propulsion systems, large solar panels, Nvidia chips and four cameras to gather imagery in hundreds of spectral bands and “crunch a lot of the data onboard,” Antila said.
Rather than selling hyperspectral imagery, Kuva is developing algorithms to provide customers whatever insights they seek. For example, a customer could define an area of interest and order continuous monitoring through an annual service agreement.
Artificial intelligence algorithms running onboard Kuva satellites and ground systems are essential to making sense of the tidal wave of data offered by hyperspectral sensors, Antila said.
Kuva’s first satellite, Hyperfield-1 reached orbit in August. Last year, Finland-based Kuva established an organization in Fairfax, Virginia to serve U.S. customers.
Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly described Hyperfield-1B, which like Hyperfield-1A is a 6u cubesat.