
Dropla Tech builds drone and robotic systems that speed up and improve safety of landmine and unexploded ordnance (UXO) detection and clearance. The company combines sensor fusion, multispectral remote sensing, machine learning, high-resolution 3D mapping, drone-swarm coordination and unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) to autonomously locate and georeference potential explosive hazards. It provides a mix of SaaS and services and integrates mapping outputs into demining workflows used by humanitarian organizations and defense contractors. Dropla operates a testing ground for evaluation and iterates with demining partners to ensure field readiness. Their tools aim to reduce survey time and enable safer, faster land release in conflict-affected areas.

Dropla Tech builds drone and robotic systems that speed up and improve safety of landmine and unexploded ordnance (UXO) detection and clearance. The company combines sensor fusion, multispectral remote sensing, machine learning, high-resolution 3D mapping, drone-swarm coordination and unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) to autonomously locate and georeference potential explosive hazards. It provides a mix of SaaS and services and integrates mapping outputs into demining workflows used by humanitarian organizations and defense contractors. Dropla operates a testing ground for evaluation and iterates with demining partners to ensure field readiness. Their tools aim to reduce survey time and enable safer, faster land release in conflict-affected areas.
Sector: DeepTech robotics and AI for humanitarian demining and explosive-threat detection
Founded: 2023
HQ: Odense, Denmark
Latest raise: €2.4M (Aug 2025)
Team size (approx.): 18 employees
Humanitarian demining, UXO and explosive-threat detection; reducing risk and time for land release in conflict zones.
2023
DeepTech
€2.4M
Strategic financing to scale edge AI explosive-threat detection and demining technologies.
“Strategic investment from Maj Invest Holding, EIFO and Final Frontier indicates institutional and sector-aligned backers focused on defense/impact technologies.”