DEFSAT 2026: ICEYE pushes sovereign SAR collaboration with India’s defence ecosystem
New Delhi, February 27. Finland-based satellite operator ICEYE deepened its engagement with India’s defence and space establishment during DEFSAT 2026, pitching its synthetic aperture radar (SAR) capabilities as critical to strengthening national security and operational resilience.
Held at the Manekshaw Centre from February 24 to 26, the conference – themed ‘Space at the Core of National Security’ – brought together senior military leaders, policymakers, industry players and international technology firms to discuss space security, strategic autonomy and resilient defence architectures.
ICEYE used the platform to showcase its advanced SAR satellite technology, highlighting its ability to deliver reliable, all-weather Earth observation data to support defence, intelligence and security operations. Unlike optical satellites, SAR systems can capture imagery regardless of cloud cover or time of day, making them particularly valuable for surveillance along sensitive borders and in disaster-prone regions.
Partha P Roy Chowdhury, Vice President (Missions) at ICEYE, addressed stakeholders on the expanding role of space-based technologies in India’s strategic planning. He noted that several European nations are now deploying sovereign SAR constellations within months of signing contracts, underscoring the growing emphasis on rapid capability enhancement. He said ICEYE’s ITAR-free, turnkey solutions could help India scale up its own space-based surveillance infrastructure efficiently.
Calling DEFSAT 2026 a significant engagement opportunity, Roy Chowdhury said discussions at the forum reinforced the importance of space-derived data in safeguarding national interests and strengthening partnerships across India’s defence, government and industrial sectors.
ICEYE also participated in a high-level panel on EU-India defence and space industrial cooperation, where Abhishek Agarwal, Director of Business Development, represented the company. The discussion focused on moving beyond strategic alignment towards concrete industrial collaboration, particularly in sovereign SAR systems, technology partnerships and resilient supply chains.
Agarwal said flexible access to space-based intelligence has become central to operational preparedness and long-term defence cooperation between European and Indian ecosystems. He added that ICEYE is already working with Indian defence and intelligence agencies to support monitoring requirements along the country’s northern and eastern frontiers.
Over the three-day event, strategic dialogues, technology demonstrations and multi-stakeholder discussions underlined the growing role of space systems in modern military architecture. ICEYE positioned commercial SAR capabilities as a force multiplier for India’s situational awareness, disaster response and security operations across both defence and civilian domains.