Thursday 15 January, 2026
[email protected]
Resilience Media
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resilience Media
No Result
View All Result

Lodestar Is Building Satellite “Bodyguards” to Protect the Next Battlefield

Resilience MediabyResilience Media
October 17, 2025
in Interview, News
Share on Linkedin

Space is no longer sleepy. It is busy, crowded, and contested. In this Resilience interview, we spoke with Neil Buchanan of Lodestar, a company that says it is building an AI “fighter pilot” for satellites. It is not a laser show. It is a brain that rides along with a satellite, sees a threat, predicts the next move, and acts.

You Might Also Like

The start up hoping to sell anti-radiation drug to Ukrainian Armed Forces

Hydrosat raises $60M for its thermal satellite imaging tech

CES isn’t just consumer tech anymore

The pitch is simple. High-value satellites keep our lives stitched together. If someone sidles up to one of those assets, you want a guardian that can watch, record, and respond. Lodestar calls them bodyguard satellites. The goal is one to one at first, then fleets that can manage multiple targets.

“It’s like a Ring doorbell for space,” said co-founder Neil Buchanan.

Buchanan started by studying hypervelocity impacts. Grains traveling at seven kilometers per second carry absurd energy. During his research, he worked on armor for satellites and on systems to keep collisions from happening. Lodestar is the next step.

Lodestar has its first payload heading up early next year. The early mission is data. How do objects look to an on-orbit sensor when you are near them, not thousands of kilometers away. Classic satellites were never built to see each other, said Buchanan. “They were meant to be left alone for decades.”

That world is gone.

I raised the risk that counter-moves could spiral. He did not blink.

“That’s the whole point we’re trying to avoid in the first place.” The fight he sees is “the gray zone,” where actors “stalk” and “jam,” sowing doubt in an operator’s mind. Lodestar’s first move is modest by design. By simply watching potential enemy satellites, they can begin to learn to defend against attackers.

“That now unlocks a new level of deterrence that so far we just don’t have,” he said. “We’re really focused on being able to prevent these actions from happening in the first place.”

Lodestar is seeing serious investment enter the field, even if the idea sounds futuristic.

“We’re seeing the winds really change here in Europe,” he said. “Germany is putting 30, 35 billion towards this by the end of 2030.”

The center of gravity is American for now.

“That’s where we have the most success,” he said, citing talent, risk appetite, and buyers. He called this “a generational N of one company,” the kind of pitch that gets real investors off the fence.

On competition, he cut to the core. The asset is not the satellite, it is the AI.

“The hill we want to live on here is around the way that our model interprets the data it sees,” he said. “We want reconstruction of the asset at a distance, classification of what you see.”

The threat is not tomorrow. It is here.

“We saw that about five to ten years ago,” he said when I asked about GPS jamming from space. He cited public remarks in the UK that Russian satellites routinely fly close in GEO and jam. The first move in the Ukraine war hit a commercial constellation.

“We have already had the first space war,” he said. “It’s the next one now that we’re worried about and trying to prevent.”

Timelines are short.

“We have our first satellite going up to orbit at the beginning of next year.” The early job is to learn what proximity really looks like, then expand with partners. They refuse long bets on fixed hardware.

“There’s no point starting a five-year R&D program to then find out in five years that the problem’s moved on,” he said.

I asked Buchanan if they had any notable battles in space so far. He demurred.

“If what we’re building works, no one will ever have to know about it,” he said.

Tags: LodestarNeil BuchananUS
Previous Post

Q-Day Won’t Be Announced: Why Europe Must Act Now

Next Post

Weekend Read: An Exclusive Interview with Mykhailo Fedorov on Ukraine’s AI War Room

Resilience Media

Resilience Media

Start Ups. Security. Defense.

Related News

gray concrete towers under white clouds and blue sky during daytime

The start up hoping to sell anti-radiation drug to Ukrainian Armed Forces

byTom Pashby
January 15, 2026

The threat of radiation incidents has shot up the agenda in recent years, in particular due to Russia’s use of...

Hydrosat raises $60M for its thermal satellite imaging tech

Hydrosat raises $60M for its thermal satellite imaging tech

byIngrid Lunden
January 15, 2026

A startup building AI-based thermal infrared satellite technology to provide data for water resource management, public safety and defence applications...

CES isn’t just consumer tech anymore

byJohn Biggs
January 14, 2026

For decades, the Consumer Electronics Show has emphasized (as you might guess by the name) the consumer side of things....

Defence Tech Valley 2025: Kicking Around Military Innovation at a Football Pitch

Tech champion Mykhailo Fedorov named new defence minister of Ukraine

byIngrid Lundenand1 others
January 14, 2026

Ukraine on Wednesday made a significant shift in its leadership that signals just how central technology is to the country...

Defense Unicorns lives up to its name: $136M round lifts valuation past $1B

Defense Unicorns lives up to its name: $136M round lifts valuation past $1B

byCarly Page
January 13, 2026

Defense Unicorns, the US startup that builds environments for defence and other industries to build and use open source and...

Touchwaves' founders Martin Romero and Charlotte Kjellander

Touchwaves brings wearable haptics to the military cockpit

byPaul Sawers
January 13, 2026

From fighter jet cockpits to surgical theaters, humans remain a critical point of failure in high-stress, high-stakes environments. Cognitive overload, physiological...

yellow electric sign

Berlin power grid attack underscores fragility of Europe’s critical networks

byCarly Page
January 12, 2026

Berlin spent days in the dark earlier this month after an arson attack crippled part of its power grid, marking...

white and black airplane flying under blue sky

MoD weighs £20M laser investment for UK air defences

byCarly Page
January 12, 2026

The Ministry of Defence is exploring whether laser weapons could bolster UK air defences, as officials look at new ways...

Load More
Next Post
Weekend Read: An Exclusive Interview with Mykhailo Fedorov on Ukraine’s AI War Room

Weekend Read: An Exclusive Interview with Mykhailo Fedorov on Ukraine’s AI War Room

Russia-Linked Hackers Claim Ransomware Attack on MoD contractor, Allege 4TB Data Theft

Russia-Linked Hackers Claim Ransomware Attack on MoD contractor, Allege 4TB Data Theft

Most viewed

Harmattan AI raises $200M at a $1.4B valuation from Dassault

InVeris announces fats Drone, an integrated, multi-party drone flight simulator

Defense Unicorns lives up to its name: $136M round lifts valuation past $1B

Terra Industries raises $12M to become ‘Africa’s first neo-prime’

6 predictions for defence in 2026

Accenture acquires Faculty to build out its AI offence

Resilience Media is an independent publication covering the future of defence, security, and resilience. Our reporting focuses on emerging technologies, strategic threats, and the growing role of startups and investors in the defence of democracy.

  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 Resilience Media

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 Resilience Media

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.