Britain has activated a new military orbital surveillance platform six months ahead of schedule as the government warned that “space is now a contested domain” and released the first images captured by its Noctis-1 military telescope.
The new system, called Borealis, is designed to help the UK military track satellites, orbital debris, and potential hostile activity in space by fusing data from multiple sensors into what officials described as a faster and more accurate operational picture for the National Space Operations Centre.
The Ministry of Defence said the software will improve the UK’s ability to monitor threats to satellites that underpin everything from military communications and navigation to banking systems and emergency services.
The rollout lands as governments across Europe scramble to harden increasingly vulnerable space infrastructure against interference, jamming, cyberattacks, and the growing amount of orbital congestion created by both commercial megaconstellations and military activity.
Images released alongside the announcement showed objects including the International Space Station and the UK’s SKYNET military communications satellites captured by Noctis-1, the UK’s military space telescope formerly known as Nyx-Alpha. Data gathered by the telescope feeds directly into Borealis, which the government said can help identify collision risks and track potentially threatening activity in orbit.
Luke Pollard, the UK’s minister for defence readiness and industry, said: “Space is now a contested domain. Protecting our satellites from adversaries keeps our economy moving and keeps us all safe. As we increase defence spending we are investing in new defensive capabilities in all domains, including UK space-based capabilities.”
Major general Paul Tedman, commander of UK Space Command, described the system as part of an effort to accelerate military decision-making in orbit. “Protecting and defending the invisible front line in space requires us to see and understand what is happening in orbit and then make decisions at machine speed,” he said.
The Borealis platform is being deployed under a £65 million, five-year contract awarded to CGI, supporting around 100 jobs across Leatherhead, Reading, and Bristol. The government said roughly 20 percent of UK GDP now depends on satellite-enabled services.
The announcement also reflects a broader shift across Europe toward sovereign military space capabilities. Earlier this week, German defence AI company Helsing and aerospace manufacturer OHB announced a joint venture called KIRK focused on tactical space-based reconnaissance systems, part of a growing European push to reduce reliance on US space intelligence infrastructure and build independent orbital surveillance and defence networks.








