BI-WEEKLY MARKET INTELLIGENCE REPORT 01.07.2025 to 15.07.2025
- harrygeisler2
- 5 days ago
- 6 min read

Welcome to the latest edition of Dual-Use Dispatch – your bi-weekly briefing on the intersection of commercial innovation and national security.
In this issue: India greenlights $12 billion in new defence procurement while the UK doubles down on undersea autonomy with a £350 million drone production hub. A major Syrian port reopens to Gulf investment for the first time in a decade. Meanwhile, Nordic Air Defence emerges as Sweden’s latest dual-use contender, raising fresh capital to scale its autonomous interceptor drones. In the Indo-Pacific, 40,000 troops assemble for Talisman Sabre. And in the cyber domain, the US Coast Guard and DHS issue urgent updates as Iranian-linked hackers ramp up infrastructure attacks.
MAJOR PROCUREMENT DEVELOPMENTS
Syrian Port Concession: Syria’s ports authority inked a 30-year, $800 million concession with UAE-based DP World on July 13 to upgrade and operate Tartus Port. The deal – focused on a new multi-purpose terminal and free trade zones – comes after the US lifted certain Syria sanctions, paving the way for foreign investment to rebuild war-torn infrastructure.
UK–Ukraine Missile Supply: The UK signed a deal on July 10 to supply over 5,000 Thales air-defence missiles to Ukraine, a transfer first announced in March. The agreement, signed by Deputy PM Angela Rayner at a conference in Rome, marks one of the UK’s largest weapon packages for Kyiv this year.
US Submarine Contract Boost: The US Navy awarded a $1.85 billion contract modification to General Dynamics Electric Boat on July 2 for long-lead materials and prep work on new Virginia-class submarines. The Pentagon had posted the award in late June, noting it will help alleviate schedule delays in submarine production by funding critical components years in advance.
UK’s Undersea Drone Factory: The UK announced plans on July 8 to invest £350 million (~$477 M) in a new autonomous submarine-drone production facility in Plymouth. Dubbed the “Resilience Factory,” the site will be co-developed with German AI firm Helsing to mass-produce underwater drones for anti-submarine warfare. The move underscores London’s push for AI-driven undersea deterrence as Russian sub activity grows in the North Atlantic.
India’s $12 billion Procurement Push: India’s Defence Acquisition Council approved the start of procurement for arms worth ₹1.05 trillion ($12.3 billion) on July 3. The shopping list spans armoured recovery vehicles, electronic warfare systems for the Army, Navy & Air Force, and new surface-to-air missile batteries, among other items – part of New Delhi’s drive to modernize capabilities amid regional security pressures.

Startup Radar: Dual-Use in Focus
Nordic Air Defence (Sweden) – Autonomous Anti-Drone Interceptors for Civil & Military Use
Swedish defence tech startup Nordic Air Defence raised $3 million in Seed funding led by Inflection VC, with participation from Finnish firm Inventure. The round marks one of the region’s largest early-stage investments in tactical autonomy, as Nordic Air Defence scales its Kreuger 100 interceptor platform – a kinetic drone designed to hunt and disable rogue UAVs.
Unlike most counter-UAS startups focused on jamming or nets, Nordic Air’s platform autonomously tracks, intercepts, and physically disables hostile drones mid-air using onboard vision, proprietary guidance, and a high-velocity kill mechanism. The company is positioning the Kreuger 100 as a dual-use tool for protecting airports, public events, and forward-operating military units – all without GPS or cloud reliance.

Recent developments (July 2025): Following the investment, Nordic Air Defence opened a new facility outside Stockholm to support small-batch manufacturing and military evaluations. It also confirmed active trials with two unnamed European defence ministries, including integration into urban airspace denial systems. The company is further developing a “defender swarm” variant designed for area denial over sensitive infrastructure like energy plants or government sites.
The team, led by former Saab engineers and European aerospace veterans, is aiming for low-cost, autonomous, hardware-native counter-drone solutions that can operate without latency or external C2 dependencies. With Europe pushing for distributed air defense and layered C-UAS systems, Nordic Air Defence’s timing and focus offer strong alignment with NATO and EU operational priorities.
Company snapshot:
Name: Nordic Air Defence AB
HQ: Stockholm, Sweden
Founded: 2023
Funding: $3 million Seed (July 2025)
Investors: Inflection VC, Inventure
Website: https://www.nordicairdefence.com
Major Defence and Security Developments
US–Ukraine Aid and NDAA: The US Senate Armed Services Committee advanced its FY2026 defence bill, including $500 million for Ukraine’s security assistance (up from $300 million) and a prohibition on retiring any A-10 close air support aircraft. The draft National Defense Authorization Act (passed in committee on July 9) authorises $925 billion total and emphasises investments in AI, unmanned systems, and hypersonic weapons to maintain US military edge against China, Iran, and other threats.

Europe – Germany–US Defence Talks: German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius met US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in Washington on July 14 seeking clarity on American arms commitments to Europe. Berlin offered to fund US-made Patriot air-defence units for Ukraine and pressed for details on a planned US long-range missile deployment in Germany.

Middle East – Iran’s New Missiles: Following a brief Israel–Iran war in June, Tehran acquired Chinese-made HQ-9B long-range SAM systems under a barter arrangement, according to intelligence sources on July 7. Iran reportedly traded oil to obtain the advanced surface-to-air batteries to replenish its air defences after Israeli strikes destroyed several Iranian missile and radar sites in the 12-day conflict.

Asia-Pacific – Allied Exercises in Australia: The Talisman Sabre 2025 wargames opened in Australia, the largest ever with 19 nations and 40,000 troops training across the country. In a first, Australia’s Army fired US-provided HIMARS long-range rockets during live-fire drills alongside forces from the US, Japan, South Korea, France and others. The exercise showcased the allies’ expanding long-range strike and joint-force capabilities as Australia reshapes its defense posture to counter China’s military buildup in the Indo-Pacific. US Marine F-35Bs and other advanced assets also integrated into the drills, which span thousands of kilometres and multiple domains (air, land, sea).

Africa – Counterinsurgency in Nigeria: Nigerian security forces reported major successes against insurgents in early July, “neutralising” 30 armed bandits in the northwest and 24 Boko Haram/ISWAP militants in the northeast. In Katsina state (NW), joint police–military units launched airstrikes to repel raiders attacking several villages.

Infrastructure Security Developments
Maritime Cybersecurity Rules: The US Coast Guard issued new cybersecurity regulations for ports and vessels, with mandatory compliance beginning July 16, 2025. The final rule requires owners of key maritime infrastructure (including flagged ships, port facilities, offshore rigs) to implement cybersecurity plans, designate Cybersecurity Officers, and institute measures like password controls, network monitoring, and incident response drills. These rules aim to harden the Marine Transportation System against rising cyber threats as ports become more digitised and inter-connected.
Iranian Cyberattack Surge: US agencies warned of an unprecedented spike in Iranian state-sponsored cyber-attacks targeting critical infrastructure. Threat intelligence reports recorded a 133% increase in Iranian hacker activity hitting US industrial systems in May–June 2025 (compared to the previous two months), with transportation and manufacturing sectors most affected. At least 28 cyber incidents were attributed to Tehran-linked APT groups in that period. This aggressive campaign, coinciding with Iran’s conflict with Israel, prompted DHS and CISA to urge enhanced network defences across railways, airlines, utilities and other vulnerable sectors.
EU Infrastructure & Defense Investment: The EU is committing hundreds of millions of euros to help Ukraine rebuild critical infrastructure – from power grids and bridges to hydropower dams – underscoring the dual-use importance of infrastructure in resilience and security.
YAVA’s takeaways:
Defence autonomy is shifting underwater. The UK’s “Resilience Factory” is a landmark move: public–private investment into AI-native undersea platforms shows that naval deterrence and autonomous systems are converging fast, especially as adversaries expand in the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific.
Nordic Air Defence’s funding round reinforces Europe’s appetite for hardware-native counter-drone solutions that don’t rely on jamming. With dense urban airspace and layered defence networks becoming the norm, cost-effective interceptor drones could shape both civilian and battlefield air security.
India’s procurement spree and Syria’s port concession signal two sides of infrastructure-led power projection: the former modernising defence posture regionally, the latter reflecting how reconstruction can now attract foreign capital under revised sanctions regimes.
Maritime cybersecurity is going mainstream. US rules now require ports and vessels to formalise cyber protections, a clear sign that connected logistics systems are becoming frontline national security concerns. It’s no longer just about ports and payloads, it’s about data, access, and resilience.
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