Defense infrastructure intelligence
Military installations, procurement, dual-use technology, and defense-industrial supply chains.
Global defense spending is undergoing a structural expansion. European rearmament, sustained Indo-Pacific military modernization, and Middle Eastern defense infrastructure investment are driving procurement budgets to historic highs. NATO members are accelerating toward and beyond the 2% GDP spending target. The defense-industrial base is being reshaped by new entrants, technology convergence, and urgent demands for production scale.
This market is exceptionally difficult to track. Defense procurement information is scattered across government budget documents, parliamentary records, contract award notices, corporate filings, and specialized trade publications — often in local languages and behind institutional access barriers.
Delphidata’s ATLAS ingestion engine monitors thousands of defense-relevant sources across multiple languages and jurisdictions, extracting structured entities — programs, contracts, companies, technologies, installations — and mapping them into the knowledge graph. Coverage spans conventional military infrastructure, major weapons systems procurement, C4ISR and electronic warfare, cyber defense, space-based defense assets, and dual-use technology.
What Delphidata tracks.
Structured data across the full value chain.
Military infrastructure
Base construction and modernization, naval facility expansion, airfield upgrades, training ranges, ammunition storage, and logistics infrastructure. Mapped with location, scope, timeline, budget, and contracting entities.
Procurement programs
Major weapons platforms (ships, aircraft, vehicles, missile systems) through to subsystems, components, and maintenance contracts. Linked to program lifecycle phase, contracting authority, and prime contractor.
Dual-use technology
Autonomous systems, directed energy weapons, hypersonic systems, quantum sensing, AI-enabled decision systems, and advanced materials. Connected to both defense and commercial applications.
Defense-industrial supply chain
Prime contractors, tier-1 and tier-2 suppliers, component manufacturers, and MRO providers. Relationship data shows which suppliers serve which programs and primes.
Defense budgets and policy
National spending, procurement allocations, offset and industrial participation policies, export control regimes, and international cooperation frameworks (NATO, AUKUS, bilateral agreements).
Who uses this intelligence.
Defense contractors and suppliers
Identify upcoming procurement opportunities, track competitor contract wins, assess which countries are expanding specific capability areas, and plan market entry strategies for new geographies.
Investors and M&A teams
Screen defense companies using structured data on contract backlogs, program participation, technology positioning, and customer concentration. The knowledge graph reveals supply chain positions that financial filings alone do not disclose.
Government and policy teams
Track allied defense spending patterns, industrial base capacity, and supply chain dependencies. Compare procurement approaches across allied nations and identify interoperability opportunities.
Strategy and advisory firms
Build defense market landscapes, competitive assessments, and capability roadmaps using structured data that replaces months of manual research.