OroraTech featured in multiple updates this week as it expanded its thermal satellite constellation, advanced key government partnerships, and gained industry recognition. The company reported operating the largest commercial thermal fleet in orbit with 16 satellites, targeting 19 by May 2026 and a tripling of its constellation within 18 months through owned and hosted payloads.
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This scaling effort is intended to improve global coverage, resilience, and revisit rates as OroraTech evolves from pure wildfire detection to a broader thermal intelligence platform. Target customers span governments, civil protection agencies, critical infrastructure operators, and commercial users, positioning the company for diversified end-market exposure.
OroraTech also highlighted progress on Greece’s Hellenic Fire System, a four-satellite thermal constellation for sovereign wildfire monitoring. Integration work by Exolaunch has been completed ahead of a planned spring launch, with the system designed to support the full wildfire lifecycle from early detection to post-event assessment.
The Greek project, developed with the European Space Agency, the Hellenic Space Center, and the Hellenic Ministry of Digital Governance, underscores OroraTech’s role in national climate resilience infrastructure. Successful deployment could reinforce its credentials for similar country-level constellations, although no financial terms or contract values were disclosed.
In North America, OroraTech emphasized its growing role in Canada’s wildfire and space programs. Ontario’s economic development minister visited the company’s Munich office for a live demonstration of its Wildfire Solution, which monitors conditions across approximately 138 million hectares of forest.
The company has supplied wildfire intelligence to Canadian authorities since 2021 and is part of the development team for the national WildFireSat mission. It has also established a headquarters in Cambridge, Ontario, signaling deeper operational commitment and potential for more stable, recurring government contracts.
OroraTech further showcased its technical capabilities at the U.S. Geological Survey’s JACIE workshop, presenting on calibration and performance of its thermal data products. Participation in this forum, which informs how U.S. agencies evaluate commercial imagery, may strengthen the company’s standing in public-sector procurement.
Industry publication Geospatial World named OroraTech Startup Company of the Year, recognizing its efforts to build a global thermal intelligence layer. Together, the award, constellation expansion, and government collaborations point to rising visibility and maturing technology, even as execution risk and undisclosed financial details leave near-term revenue impact uncertain.
On the talent front, OroraTech continued its Girls’ Day STEM outreach, hosting young women for hands-on activities in thermal infrared technology and coding. While not revenue-focused, these initiatives may support long-term innovation capacity and employer branding as the company scales its climate and disaster-intelligence offerings.
Overall, the week marked a period of operational momentum and institutional engagement for OroraTech, combining technical validation, geographic expansion, and industry recognition that collectively strengthen its position in the thermal Earth observation market.

