Hydromea & FAU Win AUKUS Grant to Unlock the Ocean's Hidden Data Layer
- HydromeaNews
- 19 hours ago
- 3 min read
June 2026

Image credit: FAU
Renens, Switzerland — Hydromea SA, the Swiss pioneer in subsea Free-Space Optical (FSO) communication, today announced that together with Florida Atlantic University (FAU) it has won a $1 million award granted through the AUKUS Maritime Innovation Challenge. The trilateral defense initiative — backed by the United States Defense Innovation Unit (DIU), Australia's Advanced Strategic Capabilities Accelerator (ASCA), and the United Kingdom's Defense and Security Accelerator (DASA) — is funding the joint team to develop a next-generation underwater communication and networking system capable of operating in contested and congested environments.
The project was selected from a highly competitive international pool of proposals from universities, research institutions, and industry across the US, UK, and Australia.
The Ocean Flies Blind
Despite hosting the world's most critical infrastructure — subsea energy pipelines, transcontinental data cables, and defense sensor networks — the ocean remains strikingly data-poor. Real-time wireless data exchange at depth is practically impossible with conventional technologies: radio waves and GPS do not penetrate seawater, and acoustic systems offer severely limited bandwidth. Vast volumes of sensor data sit stranded on the seabed, inaccessible unless a vessel physically retrieves them.
"The ocean is one of the most data-rich environments on the planet — and paradoxically the one we know the least about in real time. Thousands of sensors and vehicles generate critical intelligence on the seabed every day, and almost none of it reaches the surface in time to be actionable. Hydromea's FSO technology is the infrastructure layer the ocean has been missing. Combined with FAU's world-class expertise in acoustic networking, this award marks the moment we can bridge the gap between acoustic range and optical speed — opening a new era of ocean intelligence for both defense and civil domains."
— Igor Martin, CEO & Co-founder, Hydromea SA
Technology: Acoustic Range Meets Optical Speed
The joint FAU-Hydromea platform integrates two complementary technologies: long-range acoustic links for resilient wide-area command and control, and Hydromea's high-speed LUMA™ FSO optical modems for rapid, high-bandwidth data harvesting. This hybrid architecture resolves the fundamental trade-off that has constrained underwater operations for decades — the forced choice between range and throughput.
Hydromea's LUMA™ platform transmits at up to 10 Mbps, is pressure-certified to 12,000 meters depth, and delivers approximately 1,000× greater speed and 1,500× greater energy efficiency than acoustic alternatives. Its inherently low probability of intercept (LPI) profile makes it uniquely suited for covert, stealth data exchange in tactical underwater environments.
Testing will move from controlled lab environments in Switzerland and Florida to advanced field demonstrations off the coast of Australia, involving autonomous surface vessels, underwater vehicles, and stationary seabed systems. The project is estimated to be delivered in less than a year.
A New Market: Stealth Ocean Data Harvesting
The same hybrid architecture applicable to defense — persistent covert surveillance, anti-submarine warfare sensor nets, seabed domain awareness — applies equally to offshore energy monitoring, environmental science, and networked autonomous vehicle swarms. Together, acoustic and optical technologies open an entirely new category: subsea wireless broadband infrastructure — the ocean equivalent of the networks that transformed situational awareness above the waterline.
About Hydromea SA
Hydromea SA is a Swiss-based leader in high-speed wireless subsea communication and autonomous underwater robotics. The company's LUMA™ FSO modem platform is deployed by customers across defense, offshore energy, and ocean science worldwide. www.hydromea.com



