Calling itself the worldâs first and only aerospace âaccelerator,â Starburst returns to the Paris Air Show this week boasting a portfolio of more than 140 startups and an expanded footprint in key global markets. Founded by CEO Francois Chopard in 2012, the incubator aims to identify innovation in aviation, aerospace, and defense, and looks to cultivate new technologies in space exploration, remote sensing, air traffic management, advanced air mobility, and artificial intelligence.
"We scout for start-ups that are building viable businesses around innovative, feasible technologies, and we accelerate and invest in those that we believe will disrupt the aerospace industryâultimately leading to a safer, greener, and more connected world,â Chopard told AIN.
With offices in Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., Paris, Munich, Singapore, Seoul, Tel Aviv, and Madrid, Starburst manages a global workforce of 70 team members with 20 accelerator programs. Under the companyâs 12-month flagship accelerator program, its top ten start-ups â Momentus, Zero Avia, Red 6, WhiteFox Defense Technologies, Launcher (acquired by VAST), Ampaire, Destinus, Morpheus Space, Orbital Sidekick, and First Resonance â raised more than $1 billion as of the third quarter of 2022.
âMentorship is a key component of Starburst accelerators,â said Starburst principal Nate Mason. âDrawing from our diverse community of passionate experts, we can match each start-up with a relevant mentor in any domain of technology and at any stage of maturity. The results speak for themselvesâstart-ups that participate in our accelerators are four times more likely to raise their next round of funding than the market.â
To drive the next era of tech innovation forward, Starburst manages two active venture fundsâStarburst Ventures and Expansionâand oversees a vast network of 15,000 start-ups. On the partnership side, Starburst is connected to over 60 government entities and corporations, including Boeing, Airbus, NASA, Lockheed Martin, Thales, Daher, Dassault, Air France, Singapore Airlines, and Hyundai.
Starburstâs deep reach also benefits entrepreneurs in Asia-Pacific. Building on the success of its electronics, IT, automobiles, and marine industries, Korea now aims to establish itself as a leader in aerospace and defense (A&D), said Sangdawn Kim, managing director, Korea.
âStarburst has close relationships with several leading Korean accelerators,â said Kim. âWe are eager to introduce our global portfolio startups to Korea while also identifying new Korean aerospace and defense companies to join our community, with the goal of building an innovation hub in Korea.â
Starburst has also chosen Singapore as a launch pad to assist entrepreneurs to expand their business across the region, added Julius Yeo, managing director, Singapore.
âWe are particularly bullish about the tech market for sustainability and decarbonization, which we believe holds immense potential for growth.â
Recognizing the barriers start-ups face when accessing funding, navigating local regulations, and building necessary partnerships, Starburst coordinates across government and industries to promote fresh perspectives and consensus-building. Looking at emerging technologies, Elizabeth Reynolds, managing director of Starburst USA, expressed enthusiasm about cross-industry/dual-use applications but recognizes the insular nature of A&D markets and the lack of cross-border and cross-industry collaboration in complex adaptive systems.
âOne of the great challenges we face as an industry is that our legacy, prime, and government acquisition systems are built for linear, static relationships that donât exist anymore,â Reynolds told AIN. âThis creates friction and results in some of the best technologies being developed for other less difficult industries. Itâs imperative for industry health and national security that we rethink the acquisition process.â