Environmental

Environmental Monitoring — Wherever Nature Demands It

Whether you’re tracking water quality, glaciers, or air pollution, Lacuna helps you collect reliable environmental data from places that conventional networks cannot reach — all via satellite.

Bring critical data home from the most remote parts of the planet.

For environmental researchers and agencies, capturing accurate data from remote and sensitive ecosystems has always been a challenge. Site visits are expensive and infrequent. Helicopter flights or offshore deployments can’t scale. And vital environmental events often go unnoticed between manual inspections.

With Lacuna, now you can monitor the Earth — continuously, affordably, and at scale.

Go where no signal goes.

Most environmental hotspots—glacial ice caps, remote rivers, oceanic watersheds—have no cellular or internet connectivity. Harsh weather, extreme cold, and rugged terrain make traditional networking unreliable and expensive to deploy.

Lacuna’s direct-to-satellite connectivity changes the game. Our ultra-low-power, battery-operated sensors can be deployed anywhere on Earth, collecting and transmitting data without the need for cell towers or internet links.

Monitor more. Visit less.

Lacuna enables real-time monitoring of:

  • Water quality and flow in protected rivers
  • Peatland restoration and conservation
  • Glacier and ice sheet movement in the polar regions
  • Smoke, sediment, and flood conditions in vulnerable watersheds
  • Air quality and weather trends

Whether you’re overseeing a national park, studying climate change, or monitoring for natural disasters, Lacuna helps you keep a constant watch — even when the conditions are extreme and the location is off-grid.

Built for environmental science

With Lacuna, you can deploy sensors that:

  • Run for years on a single battery
  • Work in sub-zero or high-moisture environments
  • Transmit from anywhere — no infrastructure required
  • Deliver data you can trust for real-time decision-making

Get started

Ready to go digital, even where the signal stops?

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