Defence Security Inductive Power Ltd — Wireless Power for European Defence
In a quiet corner of Cornwall, a small UK company is tackling one of modern defense’s most unsung challenges: keeping unmanned assets powered without ever plugging in. Defence Security Inductive Power Ltd (DSIP) is pioneering technology to beam electricity across air and even through seawater, enabling drones and submersibles to recharge on the fly. Imagine an underwater robot pausing beside a submarine for a silent energy top-up, or a surveillance drone hovering over a pad to refill its batteries mid-mission. DSIP’s high-frequency inductive power systems promise exactly this capability, already demonstrating 50 kW wireless transfers over meter-plus distances with minimal loss[1]. Born in 2024 as a defense-focused spinoff of an energy innovation firm, DSIP sits at the intersection of green tech and strategic security. Its work might not grab headlines, but it addresses critical needs for NATO and Europe’s future forces – persistent operations, resilient logistics, and freedom from foreign energy tethering. By inventing a new way to send power where cables can’t reach, this niche British player could quietly help redefine European strategic autonomy and deterrence for the unmanned age. It’s a story of physics breakthroughs meeting defense imperatives – and one that defense planners are watching closely.

