- Sweden signed a multi-year contract with ICEYE to acquire sovereign SAR satellites, software, and ground systems to support national defense and space-based intelligence operations.
- The Swedish Armed Forces will own and operate the system, expanding all-weather ISR capabilities in the Nordics and strengthening NATO’s surveillance posture in Northern Europe.
Sweden has signed a contract to acquire sovereign Synthetic Aperture Radar satellites from ICEYE, establishing a national space-based intelligence capability, the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration announced on January 12 in Stockholm.
According to the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration (FMV), the multi-million, multi-year agreement was formalized by Brigadier General Carl-Fredrik Edström, Director of the Air and Space Systems Division at FMV, and Seppo Aaltonen, Vice President for Nordics and NATO at ICEYE. The contract provides for satellites, data access, software, and the ground architecture required to build and operate Sweden’s own military SAR constellation.
FMV said the Swedish Armed Forces will own and operate the system directly, allowing full sovereign control over satellite tasking, data collection, and operational use for national defense and security missions. As noted by ICEYE, the system is designed to support intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance in all weather and lighting conditions.
ICEYE stated that its satellites provide imagery with ground resolution as fine as 16 centimeters and are able to collect data through cloud cover, rain, snow, and Arctic winter darkness. The company said these conditions frequently limit traditional electro-optical satellites and that persistent SAR coverage is critical for operations across the Nordics and Arctic regions.
The Swedish Armed Forces described the acquisition as part of Sweden’s ongoing rearmament and broader national defense strategy after joining NATO. The service said the system will enhance national readiness, improve support to partners, and contribute to regional stability in Northern Europe. FMV emphasized that sovereign space-based ISR will improve Sweden’s ability to generate timely information for multi-domain operations in the High North.
ICEYE noted that the agreement reflects a broader shift across Europe toward resilient, proliferated satellite architectures owned by national defense ministries rather than reliance on single strategic systems. The company said its European, non-ITAR technology enables rapid delivery and offers options for interoperable cross-tasking with allied nations when authorized.
“ICEYE is proud to partner with the Swedish Armed Forces and deliver sovereign space-based ISR capabilities that work in all weather and lighting conditions of Northern Europe and Arctic,” Aaltonen said. “We especially welcome cooperation with Sweden and our closest Nordic NATO allies to enhance the security and resilience of the North-Eastern Flank of NATO.”
ICEYE added that the system is engineered to support federated capacity-sharing among European and NATO operators, helping strengthen space-based defense infrastructure across the alliance.

