Xoople Raises $130M Series B for AI Earth Observation Satellites
TECH

Xoople Raises $130M Series B for AI Earth Observation Satellites

27+
Signals

Strategic Overview

  • 01.
    Spanish startup Xoople raised $130 million in a Series B funding round announced on April 6, 2026, led by Nazca Capital with participation from MCH Private Equity, CDTI, Buenavista Equity Partners, and Endeavor Catalyst.
  • 02.
    The raise brings Xoople's total funding to $225 million and places the company in unicorn valuation territory, though CEO Fabrizio Pirondini declined to state the exact figure.
  • 03.
    Simultaneously, Xoople announced a partnership with U.S. space and defense contractor L3Harris Technologies to manufacture advanced optical sensors for its satellite constellation, which the company claims will collect data two orders of magnitude better than existing monitoring systems.
  • 04.
    The global earth observation market is projected to grow from $7.68 billion in 2026 to $14.55 billion by 2034, representing a CAGR of 8.31%, providing strong commercial tailwinds for Xoople's expansion.

Deep Analysis

Seven Years of Stealth Was the Strategy, Not the Delay

The most striking feature of Xoople's story is what it chose to do before launching a single satellite: spend seven years building distribution. While competitors raced to put hardware in orbit, Xoople embedded itself inside the Microsoft Azure ecosystem and became a key data partner for Esri, the world's largest geospatial software company. By the time Xoople emerged from stealth in May 2025, it already had access to enterprise procurement pipelines that most space startups spend years trying to reach.

This sequencing inverts the typical deep-tech playbook. Most satellite companies build the constellation first and figure out distribution later — often discovering that selling raw imagery to enterprises is harder than launching rockets. Xoople's bet was that AI needs better ground truth data, and satellite imagery is the missing layer — and that the missing layer needed a home inside systems enterprises already trusted. The stealth period was not about hiding; it was load-bearing construction for a distribution moat that hardware-first rivals cannot easily replicate.

The L3Harris Partnership Signals Something Bigger Than Sensors

Xoople's choice to manufacture its optical sensors through L3Harris Technologies — the American defense contractor that builds sensors for NOAA weather satellites — is not a routine procurement decision. Earth observation industry watchers noted the unusual transatlantic pairing between a European AI startup and a contractor embedded in U.S. national security infrastructure. L3Harris brings not just manufacturing capability but credibility: its sensor pedigree is validated against the most demanding operational standards in the world.

For Xoople, the partnership does double duty. It accelerates the company's ability to deliver on its claim that its data stream will be two orders of magnitude better than existing monitoring systems — a bold assertion in a market where Planet Labs, Maxar, ICEYE, BlackSky, and Airbus already operate at scale. But it also signals to U.S. government and defense-adjacent enterprise customers that Xoople's hardware supply chain runs through a trusted American partner. In a geopolitical environment where satellite data provenance increasingly matters, that supply chain choice is a market access strategy as much as an engineering decision.

Spain's National Interest Is Doing Real Work in This Deal

CDTI — the Spanish government's Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology — is not a passive co-investor in Xoople's Series B. The agency designated Xoople a Strategic Enterprise under Spain's Innvierte programme, a classification that carries policy weight beyond capital. CDTI President Teresa Riesgo stated directly that the investment 'reflects Spain's commitment to innovation and technological sovereignty,' and the Director of the Spanish Space Agency framed Xoople's work as inaugurating a new category — 'EarthAI' — rather than simply a satellite program.

This government backing serves multiple functions simultaneously. It lowers Xoople's cost of capital by anchoring rounds with patient institutional money, reduces perceived risk for private co-investors like Nazca Capital and MCH Private Equity, and provides a degree of sovereign protection that pure venture-backed competitors lack. For a company whose product — continuous, AI-ready Earth surface data — has obvious dual-use implications, having Spain's government formally backing its strategic status is not a minor footnote. It shapes how regulators, customers, and future partners read Xoople's long-term trajectory.

The Infrastructure Layer Framing Is a Competitive Moat Claim, Not Marketing

Xoople describes its product as Earth's System of Record and positions itself as the Earth data infrastructure layer built for AI. This language is precise and deliberate: infrastructure layers, once adopted at scale, generate switching costs that raw data vendors do not. By describing itself as infrastructure rather than a satellite operator or imagery provider, Xoople is asserting that its value proposition is the full stack — data collection, refinement, distribution, and value generation — not just orbital hardware.

The company's claim to serve 14-plus industry sectors, combined with its embedding inside Microsoft Azure and Esri's distribution network, supports this framing operationally. Xoople is positioning Earth observation data the way cloud providers positioned compute: as a continuous, API-accessible utility that enterprises build on top of rather than manage themselves. Whether Xoople can execute on that vision against entrenched constellation operators remains the central risk. Planet Labs, ICEYE, and Airbus have years of operational data and established enterprise relationships. But none of them emerged with Microsoft and Esri already as distribution partners before their own satellites were operational — a sequencing advantage that the $130 million Series B is now designed to close with hardware.

A Unicorn With No Satellites Yet: The Valuation Bet Explained

Xoople has reached unicorn valuation territory — confirmed by CEO Pirondini, who declined to give the exact figure — without having launched its own constellation. The company has operated to date using data collected from government satellites while building out its AI platform, cloud integrations, and enterprise customer base. Investors are effectively pricing in the future constellation, the L3Harris sensor partnership, and the distribution leverage of the Microsoft and Esri relationships.

This is a high-conviction bet on Xoople's ability to execute a hardware program at the quality threshold it has publicly committed to. The claim of data two orders of magnitude better than existing monitoring systems is not a soft marketing phrase — it is a technical specification that will be testable once satellites are operational. The $225 million raised to date must fund both the constellation build-out and the continued development of the AI platform that turns raw sensor data into the enterprise-grade intelligence product Xoople is selling. In a market growing at 8.31% annually toward $14.55 billion by 2034, the addressable opportunity justifies the bet; the execution risk is whether Xoople's sensor quality claims and AI-native architecture can differentiate it durably once it is competing on hardware as well as software.

Historical Context

2019-01-01
Xoople was founded in Madrid, Spain, entering a stealth phase to develop its technology stack around data collected from government satellites and integrating with cloud providers.
2025-05-14
Xoople emerged from approximately six years of stealth with a EUR 115 million funding announcement, designating itself the world's first Earth Intelligence company and revealing partnerships with Microsoft and Esri.
2025-08-01
Xoople raised an additional EUR 22 million equity round, bringing its total funding at that time to EUR 137 million.
2026-04-06
Xoople announced a $130 million Series B led by Nazca Capital, bringing total funding to $225 million and achieving unicorn valuation; simultaneously announced the L3Harris sensor manufacturing partnership.

Power Map

Key Players
Subject

Xoople Raises $130M Series B for AI Earth Observation Satellites

XO

Xoople

Spanish AI-native Earth observation startup building the EarthAI platform and satellite constellation; primary beneficiary of the Series B funding round.

FA

Fabrizio Pirondini

CEO and co-founder of Xoople; leads strategic direction, fundraising, and vision for Earth Intelligence as an AI infrastructure layer.

NA

Nazca Capital

Lead investor in Xoople's $130M Series B; Spanish venture capital firm backing European deep tech.

CD

CDTI (Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology)

Spanish government tech development fund and co-investor in the Series B; designated Xoople a Strategic Enterprise under Spain's Innvierte programme.

L3

L3Harris Technologies

U.S. space and defense contractor partnered with Xoople to manufacture advanced optical sensors for its satellite constellation.

MI

Microsoft and Esri

Strategic technology partners providing Azure cloud infrastructure and geospatial software distribution channels respectively, embedding Xoople's data platform into dominant enterprise ecosystems.

THE SIGNAL.

Analysts

"Pirondini frames the company's mission around the urgent need for real-time Earth surface intelligence: 'In our volatile world, the ability to quickly detect and precisely understand changes on Earth's surface is crucial.'"

Fabrizio Pirondini
CEO and Co-founder, Xoople

"Frames Spain's investment in Xoople as a matter of national strategic priority: 'Our investment in Xoople reflects Spain's commitment to innovation and technological sovereignty.'"

Teresa Riesgo
President, CDTI

"Positions Xoople as inaugurating a new category of Earth observation: 'Xoople is building a new era of Earth Observation, called EarthAI.'"

Juan Carlos Cortes Pulido
Director, Spanish Space Agency

"Validates Xoople's market positioning from a distribution partner's perspective: 'Their purpose-built Earth Intelligence service is solving unmet business needs, delivering AI-ready data.'"

Richard Cooke
Corporate Director, Esri
The Crowd

"The next Earth observation company launching its own satellite constellation - with a bit of a twist. Spanish Xoople, which has partnerships with Microsoft and Esri, has interestingly ordered payloads from US-based L3Harris (the one that builds NOAA weather sats)."

@@aravindEO732

"Spain's Xoople raises $130 million Series B to map the Earth for AI"

@@TechCrunch33

"BREAKING: A Spanish startup just raised $130M to build Earth's System of Record. Xoople's bet: AI needs better ground truth data, and satellite imagery is the missing layer. 7 years building distribution into Microsoft and Esri before launching a single satellite"

@@rdominguezibar62
Broadcast