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The BiDS Award spotlights top European space start-ups

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The BiDS Award, a joint initiative by ESA Φ-lab and ESA BIC Latvia, took place at the 2025 Big Data from Space (BiDS) conference to boost European space start-ups and academia. The award provided visibility and networking opportunities for those working on space-based solutions that address global challenges, facilitating the commercialisation of deep-tech innovations. The winners of the 2025 edition were AgroRisk, SALUTS, and Hyphorest.  

The BiDS Award, organised jointly by ESA Φ-lab and ESA BIC Latvia, took place on 2 October 2025, within the framework of the Big Data from Space (BiDS) conference. This award brought industry, research, and policy leaders together to explore how deep tech solutions and space data can be leveraged to address critical global challenges.

This initiative focused on transforming raw data into knowledge, insight, and foresight, showcasing how advancements on space technologies are boosting data usage to deliver impactful planetary solutions, and providing visibility and networking opportunities for European space start-ups and academia.

While proposals at the intersection of Earth observation and global challenges were central, the scope was broad, encouraging solutions from across the entire space value chain. This included upstream, downstream, and spin-in innovations such as advanced materials, robotics, quantum technologies, satellite communications, in-orbit services, navigation, and AI-driven analytics.

The award’s areas of focus included precision agriculture and food security, environmental sustainability and biodiversity tracking, or sustainable energy and infrastructure monitoring, among many more. The winners were awarded one year of free access to AI-data analytics platforms from Altair (in a total value of € 300.000) and access to satellite imagery from Airbus (valued in a total of € 25.000).

The third place was awarded to Hyphorest (Germany), a Stuttgart-based startup and incubatee of ESA BIC Baden-Württemberg that aims to bring finance to nature by making it easy to invest in restoration, carbon farming, and carbon removal projects that are measurable, transparent, and grounded. Using satellite data, AI, and blockchain, Hyphorest quantifies natural impact such as biomass, biodiversity, CO₂ storage, and ecosystem recovery, while strengthening the role of local and indigenous communities in achieving these goals.

The platform enables companies and individuals to invest in climate and nature-positive projects with measurable outcomes, turning environmental and social impact into a trusted, data-driven asset class. The solution presented at BiDS helps companies invest in nature, track their impact, and report results within their corporate sustainability targets and frameworks. Hyphorest’s mission is to build trust in nature-based investments and make real progress visible to everyone.

“Winning the BiDS Award affirms our belief that space technology is one of the most powerful tools for climate resilience. At Hyphorest, we turn satellite data into living evidence of restoration, making environmental impact measurable, transparent, and investable. Being recognised by ESA Φ-lab and the BiDS community encourages us to keep pushing the frontier where space innovation meets nature,” commented Hojjat Mansourpour, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Hyphorest.

SALUTS (Germany) confirmed its position as a leading innovator in the European space-tech ecosystem by winning the second place. SALUTS’ mission is to redefine AI-driven autonomy in space and beyond by transforming space computing with ultra-efficient chips that enhance real-time, in-orbit data processing. Their vision was first recognized in 2023 when SALUTS won the 5th CASSINI Hackathon, an achievement that led to their selection by ESA BIC Bavaria to further develop their winning project.

The innovation that secured their BiDS Award recognition is CHIRB (Computing on Hybrid Interplanetary Relay Basis), a revolutionary advanced AI system that acts as the next-generation mission control centre for space, defence, and industrial AI applications. At the heart of CHIRB is Robot-on-a-Chip, SALUTS’ proprietary AI technology, whose chips are engineered to use 90% less power while providing three times more reliable data processing directly on the device.

CHIRB integrates seamlessly with existing infrastructure, featuring a natural language interface that lets any user simply chat their requests, which are converted by the system into working code and hardware control, thus eliminating the need for complex coding or technical knowledge.

“At SALUTS, ‘We Deliver Autonomy at the Edge and Clarity at Scale’. Our platform, CHIRB, combines ultra-low-power hardware modules with advanced AI software to make complex operations autonomous, efficient, and sustainable. The outcome: faster decisions, lower costs, and more reliable operations,” stated Mohamed Sobhy Fouda, Chief Executive Officer and Founder of SALUTS.

The first place was awarded to AgroRisk (Denmark), a climate fintech platform and incubatee of ESA BIC Denmark that quantifies agricultural and financial risks caused by climate change and extreme weather. By combining Earth observation data, weather models, and financial risk analytics, AgroRisk enables banks, insurers, and farmers to assess the climate exposure of agricultural assets at both field and portfolio level.

The platform translates satellite and climate data into actionable financial insights, helping financial institutions comply with new sustainability regulations and supporting farmers in adapting to a changing climate. AgroRisk contributes to food security, climate adaptation, and sustainable finance — leveraging space technology to enable data-driven resilience in the agricultural sector.

“Space data is transforming how we understand and manage climate risks on Earth. At AgroRisk, we use satellite-based insights to translate what happens in orbit into tangible value on the ground — helping banks, insurers, and farmers make smarter, more sustainable decisions. The BiDS Award highlights how space innovation can directly contribute to planetary resilience and sustainable finance,” commented Theodor Christensen, CEO and Founder of AgroRisk.

The winners of the 2025 BiDS Award. From left to right: Sabrina Ricci (AI Ecosystem Coordinator at ESA Φ-lab), Hojjat Mansourpour (CEO and Founder of Hyphorest, 3rd place), Mohamed Sobhy Fouda (CEO and Founder of SALUTS, 2nd place), Theodor Christensen (CEO and Founder of AgroRisk, 1st place), and José Manuel Delgado Blasco (Geospatial System Engineer at ESA Φ-lab). Photo courtesy of ESA/Sabrina Ricci.

A special recognition goes to Andrii Chepurnyi, PhD student at the University of Latvia, who received a prize for his Earth observation-calibration project. As part of the award, he will join the Commercialization Reactor’s Commercialization Dive programme.

Andrii Chepurnyi (middle), PhD student at the University of Latvia, won a special recognition. Photo courtesy of Gatis Orlickis.

“The BiDS Award is another example of collaboration between organisations dedicated to developing the European Space capabilities in Deep Space and Earth Observation. In this occasion, both industry and academia responded positively, as well as partners and sponsors needed to make this award a success. This success, along other parallel efforts, wants to push the limits of Space technology and help develop European champions that proposed solutions to real problems with space technology,” commented José Manuel Delgado Blasco, Geospatial System Engineer at ESA Φ-lab and co-organiser of the BiDS Award.

“In this award, we have collected many brilliant participants addressing problems such as space debris, environmental and atmospheric pollution, and climate change. It has been a pleasure to work with ESA BIC Latvia, Airbus and Altair and I want to thank all the people involved and participants who made this award a success – and a starting point for future collaborations,” José added.

“The success of the BiDS Awards within such a vibrant and diverse ecosystem as the Big Data from Space community confirms how rewarding it is to push the boundaries of space and connect with emerging pioneers of technology. Their contributions help us drive innovation both in Earth Observation and in Space. The enthusiastic response from sponsors, participating companies — including those who did not win — has encouraged us to continue promoting these initiatives as catalysts for new collaborations and interactions,” commented Sabrina Ricci, AI Ecosystem Coordinator at ESA Φ-lab and co-organiser of the BiDS Award.

To know more: BiDS Award, ESA Φ-lab, ESA BIC Latvia

Photo courtesy of Gatis Orlickis

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