Landmark Suhora-Satellogic Deal Transforms India's AI and Earth Observation
Suhora and Satellogic unlock sub-meter satellite data for India and Nepal, driving AI innovation and enabling sustainable national development.
September 3, 2025

A landmark seven-figure, multi-year agreement is set to dramatically reshape the Earth Observation (EO) landscape in India and Nepal, as space data analytics firm Suhora Technologies has secured exclusive rights to provide high-resolution satellite imagery and services from Satellogic.[1][2][3] This strategic partnership will see Suhora leverage its proprietary SPADE platform to deliver Satellogic's sub-meter resolution data to a burgeoning market of government and commercial users, signaling a significant leap forward in the accessibility and application of advanced geospatial intelligence in the region.[1][4] The deal, an expansion of a previously successful collaboration, aims to meet the surging demand for data-driven decision-making in two of South Asia's most dynamic and rapidly developing nations.[1][2]
The significance of this exclusive agreement lies in its potential to democratize access to critical geospatial insights across a multitude of sectors.[1] India’s Earth Observation market is on a steep growth trajectory, with projections indicating it will reach hundreds of millions of dollars by 2030, driven by national priorities and a growing need for efficient resource management.[5][6] Until now, access to high-frequency, high-resolution satellite data has often been complex and cost-prohibitive. This partnership directly addresses that challenge by combining Satellogic’s cost-effective data collection with Suhora’s streamlined delivery mechanism.[1][7] Suhora, an Indian geospatial intelligence company founded in 2018, is positioned to serve as the critical bridge between the advanced satellite constellation and the end-users grappling with complex environmental and urban challenges.[1][8] According to Krishanu Acharya, CEO and Co-Founder of Suhora Technologies, India's rapid growth necessitates innovative technological solutions, and this collaboration is poised to empower a new wave of applications that support sustainable progress and national resilience.[1]
At the heart of the collaboration are two key technological pillars: Suhora's SPADE platform and Satellogic's advanced satellite constellation.[1] SPADE, a subscription-based Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solution, simplifies access to multi-sensor satellite data, integrating imagery from over 250 sensors, including optical, thermal, and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) formats.[9][10][11] The platform is designed to provide clients with analysis-ready data, removing the complexities of processing and making it easier for users to derive actionable insights for applications like mineral classification, environmental monitoring, and disaster management.[12][11] This user-friendly gateway will now provide exclusive access to data from Satellogic's vertically integrated constellation of microsatellites. Satellogic, a company founded in 2010, operates a growing fleet of over 34 satellites capable of capturing sub-meter multispectral imagery and hyperspectral data.[13][14] The company's patented technology allows for multiple daily revisits of any point of interest on Earth, offering imagery at a resolution of up to 50 centimeters.[13][7] This combination of high resolution, high frequency, and affordability is a disruptive force in the EO market, and with plans to expand its constellation to over 200 satellites, Satellogic is aiming to remap the entire planet on a weekly basis.[13][14]
The implications for the artificial intelligence industry in India and Nepal are profound. The availability of vast, consistently updated, and high-resolution datasets is the fuel for machine learning and AI development. The data stream from Satellogic, made readily available through SPADE, is perfectly suited for training sophisticated AI algorithms to perform tasks such as automated change detection, object recognition, and predictive analytics.[7][15] In agriculture, for instance, AI models can analyze multispectral imagery to monitor crop health, predict yields with greater accuracy, and optimize the use of water and fertilizers, directly supporting the sector that employs a significant portion of India's workforce.[16][17] For disaster management, a critical concern in a region prone to floods, earthquakes, and cyclones, AI can process near-real-time imagery to assess damage, identify safe evacuation routes, and coordinate relief efforts with unprecedented speed and precision.[18][19] This partnership effectively provides the raw material for the GeoAI revolution, enabling public and private organizations to develop smarter, more sustainable outcomes by embedding geospatial intelligence directly into their operational workflows.
In conclusion, the exclusive partnership between Suhora and Satellogic marks a pivotal moment for the geospatial and AI sectors in India and Nepal. By uniting Satellogic's powerful Earth Observation capabilities with Suhora's localized expertise and accessible SPADE platform, the deal is set to unlock significant value across critical areas such as infrastructure development, climate change mitigation, and natural resource management.[1][2] It addresses the growing appetite for high-quality geospatial intelligence and equips a new generation of analysts, developers, and decision-makers with the tools needed to tackle pressing national challenges.[1] As Emiliano Kargieman, CEO of Satellogic, noted, the partnership will help solve significant national challenges from security to sustainability, heralding a new era of data-driven progress for the region.[1]
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