Seasats is a San Diego-based technology company specializing in autonomous surface vehicles (ASVs) for defense, scientific research, and commercial surveying sectors.[1][2][3][4] Its flagship product, the Lightfish, is a modular, solar-powered ASV designed for long-endurance ocean missions, enabling persistent maritime domain awareness (MDA), environmental monitoring, and data collection in the Blue Economy.[1][3][4] Serving naval forces, research institutions like NOAA and Scripps, and commercial users in offshore wind and aquaculture, Seasats solves challenges of costly manned operations by providing low-profile, rapidly deployable platforms with multi-month endurance, advanced sensors (radar, LiDAR, cameras), and open architecture for third-party integration.[2][3][5] Backed by investors like L3Harris and Shield Capital, the company has achieved growth through U.S. Navy contracts, global deployments, and recent product expansions like the Quickfish interceptor.[3][4][5]
Seasats traces its roots to 2011 in Rhode Island, where a group of friends experimented with low-cost, portable systems to send a message across the Atlantic Ocean amid limited technology availability.[2] This hands-on tinkering evolved into early successes, including pilot science missions with Scripps Institution of Oceanography, commercial services, and demonstrations for the Navy Postgraduate School.[2] Formally founded in 2020 and headquartered in San Diego, California, the company launched its production-ready Lightfish ASV in 2023, scaling from prototypes to customer deliveries and multi-year contracts like those with U.S. Navy's TF59 task force.[1][2][5] Led by CEO and President Mike Flanigan, Seasats has grown its team and partner network, proving ASV reliability through milestones like a 2,500-mile autonomous voyage from San Diego to Hawaii in 2024.[2][5]
Seasats stands out in the ASV market through engineering focused on reliability, ease of use, and scalability for open-ocean missions:
Seasats rides the wave of ocean autonomy and uncrewed systems expansion, fueled by rising demand for affordable ISR in contested maritime domains amid geopolitical tensions and Blue Economy growth.[2][3][4] Timing aligns with U.S. Navy priorities for force multipliers, as demonstrated in TF59 collaborations and L3Harris partnerships, addressing manpower shortages with resilient, low-logistics ASVs that extend sensor networks without risking personnel.[2][5] Market forces like offshore renewables, aquaculture scaling, and illegal fishing threats favor Seasats' data collection capabilities, influencing the ecosystem by accelerating commercial tech adoption in defense (e.g., MDA for ports/harbors) and enabling consistent ocean data for climate research and sustainable industries.[1][3][4]
Seasats is poised to expand its Lightfish platform and roll out specialized models like Quickfish for interception, leveraging its IP stack, growing production in San Diego, and alliances with primes like L3Harris to capture defense contracts and Blue Economy opportunities.[2][4][5] Trends in multi-domain autonomy, AI-driven ocean data analytics, and hybrid fleets will shape its path, potentially amplifying U.S. naval presence globally while reducing costs for science and commercial users.[2][5] As ASVs prove indispensable for persistent, scalable maritime ops, Seasats' focus on reliable, user-friendly tech positions it to lead, transforming ocean missions from resource-intensive to autonomous norms—echoing its origins in scrappy transatlantic innovation now delivering global impact.[2]
Seasats has raised $10.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Seasats's investors include Audrey Capital, BoxGroup, Broadstone, E14 Fund, ENIAC Ventures, Far Out Ventures, Innospark Ventures, LAUNCH, MetaProp Ventures, Monozukuri Ventures, Mozilla Ventures, Offline Ventures.
Seasats has raised $10.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $10.0M Seed in October 2022.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 1, 2022 | $10.0M Seed | Audrey Capital, BoxGroup, Broadstone, E14 Fund, ENIAC Ventures, Far Out Ventures, Innospark Ventures, LAUNCH, MetaProp Ventures, Monozukuri Ventures, Mozilla Ventures, Offline Ventures, Ben Huh, Redpoint Ventures, Scout Ventures, Slow Ventures, Techstars, Vayner RSE, Chung Ng, Frederic Kerrest, Josh Spear, Keith Masback, Merlin Kauffman, Oleg Rogynskyy, Scott Belsky |