NordSpace awarded DND IDEaS funding
April 21, 2026
NordSpace, a Canadian-owned space missions and launch company, has been awarded approximately $250,000 in funding under the Department of National Defence (DND) Innovation for Defence Excellence and Security (IDEaS) programme to advance its Very Low Earth Orbit (VLEO) satellite constellation technology for resilient non-terrestrial networks (NTN). This award stems from the IDEaS ‘Extended communication coverage: Exploiting connections of Earth and space systems’ challenge, which seeks breakthrough solutions that integrate satellite and terrestrial networks to enable secure, ubiquitous connectivity for defence and public safety operations across Canada and in allied theatres.
Through this IDEaS Competitive Projects Phase 1 award, NordSpace will mature key technologies for a constellation consisting of its previously undisclosed VLEO satellite concept named ‘Kestrel’. The project focuses on architecture and payload concepts that enable extended broadband coverage, improved link budgets, and reduced latency compared to higher-orbit constellations, while remaining compatible through direct-to-device (D2D) systems with standard 5G mobile networks and IoT devices.
Crucially, NordSpace is using this phase to lay the groundwork for a future operational responsive VLEO constellation of Kestrel satellites targeting daily 10 cm spatial resolution imaging and markedly lower latency as part of its medium-term goals to develop an end-to-end space missions capability in Canada. This future state aims to fuse ultra–high resolution Earth observation and space domain awareness (SDA) of LEO assets with real-time data downlinks enabling richer situational awareness and more responsive connectivity for defence, public safety, and remote users than legacy systems can provide. Launching this constellation from NordSpace’s orbital class rockets and dedicated spaceport, the Atlantic Spaceport Complex (ASX) in Newfoundland and Labrador, will deliver on the company’s strategic goals for internalized launch demand and cadence, as well as a truly sovereign space missions capability for Canada.
Canada’s Defence Industrial Strategy identified SDA as a sovereignty priority, with NORAD modernization pulling cislunar custody into scope. A domestic VLEO asset like NordSpace’s Kestrel fits that gap uniquely well: sitting below the debris belt and above the bulk of the atmosphere, a maneuverable VLEO platform can deliver persistent custody of objects from LEO to HEO to cislunar space, a capability that ground sites cannot match. NordSpace’s concept directly addresses IDEaS’ essential outcome of enabling operations in remote, unserved, and underserved regions, as well as in scenarios where terrestrial infrastructure is damaged or overloaded by disasters or crises. In particular, the VLEO architecture is being shaped around use cases such as Arctic operations, wildfire detection and response, and maritime and remote land operations where uninterrupted, interoperable communications are critical for DND/CAF and public safety partners.
“Non-terrestrial networks are transforming how we think about coverage, resilience, and interoperability, evidenced by systems like SpaceX’s Starlink” said Rahul Goel, Chief Executive Officer of NordSpace. “By iterating quickly from our Space Systems Lab to on-orbit demonstrators, we can help DND/CAF and public safety agencies stay ahead of threats, maintain communications in the harshest conditions, and better protect Canadians at home and abroad. As the industry moves toward future constellations with 10 cm ultra-high-resolution imaging and low-latency direct-to-device links, we see a clear path to a new generation of space-enabled situational awareness and command-and-control. Launching constellations of small VLEO Kestrel satellites from our own launch vehicles and our own spaceport will result in the truly capable sovereign space missions capability Canada lacks, and a self-sustaining scalable commercial enterprise.”
