ReportWire

Tag: SBIR

  • L.A.’s defense industry is booming. Federal funding crunch could change that

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    When former Space X engineer Josh Giegel launched his North Hollywood tech company Gambit in 2023, he had a vision for the battlefield of the future, one with fewer soldiers and more AI-driven assets.

    His software would allow unmanned tanks and swarms of armed drones to communicate and adapt in real time — without human intervention.

    The company now employs more than a dozen people and has contracts with the military, which is testing his software. But its growth has been clouded because of a funding dispute on Capitol Hill over the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, which provides companies seed capital to develop new technology that can assist the government. Funding for it and related programs expired in September.

    The seed fund has been vital to many local tech startups. Gambit received $3.3 million from the program early on and was hoping to get another $5 million of the Small Business Administration money, which is allocated by the military.

    Workers at K2 Space in Torrance, where the startup is building high-capacity satellites for Medium Earth Orbit. (K2 Space)

    (K2 Space)

    “That funding really helps companies like ours that are putting tech into warfighters’ hands,” Giegel said. “Losing that money becomes more leg work to find other sources.”

    Gambit’s predicament is widely shared across Southern California, which has experienced a proliferation of tech startups launched by SpaceX alumni and other entrepreneurs with the support of SBA money.

    In 2024, 124 contracts worth $173 million were awarded to 71 California companies through SpaceWERX, an El Segundo-based arm of the Space Force that distributes SBA funding to innovative defense startups.

    The money also is disbursed by other branches of the military and departments of the government, which do not take stakes in the companies. Gambit received funds through the Air Force.

    Other local recipients of SBA funding include Costa Mesa autonomous weapons maker Anduril Industries, now valued at more than $30 billion; and satellite platform manufacturers K2 Space in Torrance and Apex Space in Los Angeles.

    The funds are allocated in phases, with initial feasibility awards up to about $300,000 and as much as $2 million for the development of prototypes. A maximum of $15 million is available through a companion SBA-funded program if the companies can bring in other funding.

    “I don’t know if I can name a single company that I work with, or that I know of, that did not start with SBIR” funding, said Maggie Gray, a partner at Silicon Valley venture capital firm Shield Capital, which invested in Apex. “We see SBIR as a crucial part of the defense-tech ecosystem. It’s kind of the way to get your initial foot in the door with the government.”

    Established in 1982, the SBA program provides more than $4 billion to government departments, with the military receiving the lion’s share. But SBA funding ran out on Sept. 30 as lawmakers clashed over proposed reforms.

    Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who chairs the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, introduced a bill that would set a $75-million lifetime cap on funds for individual companies and establish performance benchmarks. The bill also would beef up due diligence to prevent new technology falling into the hands of foreign adversaries and end diversity, equity and inclusion preferences in funds distribution.

    The legislation, however, has faced stiff opposition from Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey, the ranking Democrat on the committee, who contends the reforms go overboard and would crimp innovation. A bipartisan House bill that would have reauthorized SBA funding for a year failed in the Senate amid opposition by Ernst, who is leaving Congress in a year.

    While negotiations have restarted on Capitol Hill, there is no guarantee SBA financing will be restored, though the military and other government agencies could fund startups through their own budgets.

    The SpaceWERX program, which has played a critical role in Southern California’s resurgent space economy, was established in 2020, just one year after the Space Force was founded.

    Director Arthur Grijalva said the program distributes several hundred million dollars in SBA funding annually across the nation and has not had an issue with foreign influence or companies receiving repeat awards without much to show for it.

    “Even though it might be small [funding] for a really big company, it’s really impactful for these small companies, these startups, where if they don’t have this funding, they might have to do layoffs, they might have to go into debt, or they might ultimately not be successful,” Grijalva said.

    Since September, $94 million in larger contracts has been held up for more than 25 companies, which follow funding for feasibility studies and prototypes, according to SpaceWERX.

    The impasse comes at an inopportune time for the Trump administration, which has been overhauling weapons procurement.

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced in November a policy to speed up weapons development by first finding capabilities in the commercial market before the government attempts to develop new systems. Last week he visited several L.A.-area defense companies, including Torrance startup Castelion, a manufacture of hypersonic missiles that received SBIR funding.

    Kirsten Bartok Touw, managing partner of New Vista Capital, which invested in Castelion, agreed the program may have flaws but said it plays an invaluable role in attracting venture capital to companies that have drawn the funding.

    “That is an important signal to the market, which says, ‘You should invest in more of these, because this is a technology we want and need,’” she said.

    A report this month by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine found that one dollar of the funding distributed by the military attracts more than four dollars of venture capital or other third-party investment.

    Markey’s office said last week he submitted a proposal to Ernst that includes making the SBIR program permanent, increased allocations, a performance metric, foreign due diligence standards and fellowships for underserved small businesses, among other provisions.

    “This bill is [his] second attempt at breaking the logjam and restarting these critical programs to ensure America’s most nimble allies — small businesses — are not decimated,” a Markey spokesperson said.

    A spokesperson for Ernst said last week that the senator “remains focused on ensuring taxpayer investments in R&D do not benefit China and actually deliver cutting-edge technology for our warfighters.”

    Giegel said that while he is optimistic future SBA funding might come through for Gambit, he is not counting on it. He now assumes he will have to look for other sources of money to grow the company, which already attracted undisclosed venture capital.

    “We’re trying to find operational relevance faster,” he said.

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    Laurence Darmiento

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  • 2 Programs That Gave $4.7 Billion to Small Businesses Last Year Just Shut Down

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    The plunge into American entrepreneurship is anything but easy. Just ask Daniel Spokoyny, who took the leap this month after leaving academia to start BeeSafe AI, a San Diego-based startup aimed at combatting cyber criminals that use social engineering methods to scam consumers. If you have a phone and have ever received an SMS message inviting you to apply for a job, or maybe suggesting that you won the lottery, then you’ve likely encountered one of these schemes.

    Spokoyny and his co-founder, Nikolai Vogler, are gathering intel on scammers, building out so-called “honeypot” chatbots, which will mimic real-life victims. This will help map out the networks of these cybercriminals in real-time.

    To pay their salaries, build infrastructure and purchase software services, the co-founders applied for and received $305,000 worth of funding from The Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program. Without that program, Spokoyny says, BeeSafe wouldn’t be in business.

    “The fact that these ventures are high-risk for academics is particularly what drives innovation because we tried to go out and raise money last year, and our technology was too high-risk for investors,” Spokoyny says. “That’s why we applied to the Small Business Innovation Research.”

    SBIR and its peer, the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) are decades-old programs that have doled out more than $70 billion in funding to entrepreneurial research projects that show promise for innovation and mass commercialization. More than 30,000 companies owe their success in part to SBIR and STTR.

    The main difference between the two is that SBIR, which started in 1982, has mainly focused on small businesses conducting their own R&D efforts while STTR, which started in 1992, often involves a partnership between a university or research lab and an entrepreneur. The three phases of the program are broken down into research, prototyping, and commercialization, respectively. 

    Notable beneficiaries of SBIR include Qualcomm, which received $1.5 million in funding in the 1980s to build the technology underpinning our modern cellular networks.

    But as of this month, both SBIR and SBTT are on ice.

    Funding for the programs ran out on Oct. 1 and was the subject of heated debate in the Senate Committee on Small Business & Entrepreneurship between the committee’s top lawmakers: Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA), committee chair, and Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA), ranking member. 

    “The SBIR & STTR programs fuel America’s innovation engine,” Markey, who has sought to make the program permanent, said last week. “Cutting successful small businesses out would be like cutting your top scorer before a big game.”

    Sen. Ernst introduced her own bill as well, arguing that the programs are vulnerable to abuse from foreign adversaries like China. She pointed to a report she released that found 835 applications were flagged for having foreign risks between 2023 and 2024. (Of those applications, 303 were denied.) 

    “Even one case is too many,” Ernst said. 

    To the benefit of thousands of small companies, the government sought to obligate $4.7 billion across the two programs during fiscal year 2024.

    And for as much funding as SBIR and SBTT have given out, they’ve also helped save the government money as well. A total of $4.5 million in SBIR awards allowed the Scottsdale, Arizona-based W5 Technologies, a mobile communication company, to come in and enhance a global communication network used by the government. In doing so, they helped the Department of Defense save $30 million, according to company CEO Jason Ferguson.

    How did they do it? In essence, by taking a cell tower and extending the antenna out by 20,000 miles with unique satellite technology.

    W5’s system uses what’s known as geosynchronous satellites. No bigger than two shoeboxes glued together, these satellites orbit the moon more closely than they do Earth. What’s special about them is that they rotate around the equator at the same speed as that of the Earth’s rotation. So from our perspective from Earth, the satellite is stationary. Because of this, W5 uses these satellites as cell towers to bounce signals off of. The technology helps American warfighters communicate in real-time (For security reasons, the military doesn’t use commercial networks like Verizon or Comcast for their comms.)

    “The SBIR program allowed us to make the transition from only supporting large primes to us being a prime ourselves and really taking an idea, turning it into a working product, marketing it, and then selling it back into the Department of Defense,” Ferguson says.

    In fostering American innovation, the programs have not just heightened national security, but strengthened economic security in the commercialization efforts of some of these projects. (More successful ventures allow for their expansion, which injects more jobs in a local ecosystem.)

    So what happens to American innovation and to the small entities that might flounder without the benefits derived from SBIR and STTR? Just ask BeeSafe’s Spokoyny. “There’s a very good chance that without [SBIR funding], I wouldn’t have started the company with my co-founder.”

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    Melissa Angell

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  • BrainGu Wins $15 Million US Air Force Contract

    BrainGu Wins $15 Million US Air Force Contract

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    AFWERX STRATFI award highlights sustainable common software environment made possible by Structsure, BrainGu’s DevSecOps Platform.

    Press Release


    Nov 29, 2022 09:00 EST

    BrainGu, a software development company focused on empowering innovation and rapid software prototyping for customers in highly regulated industries, announced today that it has been awarded a $15 million contract by the US Air Force’s Strategic Funding Increase (STRATFI) program. The $15 million contract was awarded through AFWERX, the Air Force’s innovation hub, as part of USAF efforts to accelerate the development of mission-critical technology with the assistance of highly innovative companies like BrainGu. 

    “The STRATFI contract awarded to BrainGu signals the Air Force’s commitment to invest in the future of BrainGu and our Structsure products. Together we will further the mission of empowering operators to get directly involved in the development of software tools that benefit them and support their mission,” said Tim Gast, VP BrainGu Labs. “The demand for integrated software solutions that enable or enhance Air Force operational and business systems has never been greater. At BrainGu, we are committed to supporting our warfighters with our DevSecOps platform, Structsure. With Structsure, we are creating a sustainable common environment that enables operator-driven mission application development from concept to combat.”

    AF Ventures opportunities have given BrainGu an on-ramp to bring software and unique capabilities to the DoD and engage with stakeholders across the DoD to optimize the DevSecOps Platform to support the DoD operational environment. STRATFI funding will accelerate BrainGu’s custom platform development efforts in support of the US Air Force’s strategic mission, as well as other key mission partners across the US Department of Defense – including the US Navy and Army. With Structsure, BrainGu continues to bring modern, DevSecOps approaches to support high-quality software delivery to military and intelligence missions.

    Who Is BrainGu?

    BrainGu is a small business delivering DevSecOps platforms that enable our customers to provide rapid, adaptable, and secure application delivery through cloud-native automation. Our Structsure platform enables our customers to focus on their core business competencies by starting them out on day one with all the tools they need to get the job done. No more guesswork about what infrastructure, toolkits, or best practices to select – our platform works across a range of environments, both in the public and private sectors, with proven tools and automation that work. We support secure software throughout the lifecycle so our customers know their applications and data are protected. Our application acceleration suite gives our customers easy-to-use components they can leverage to build faster, telemetry to get insight into app and user behavior, and the ability to get their code into production in minutes.

    Source: BrainGu

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