Terra Industries, a Lagos-based defense and data intelligence company, has secured new funding led by US venture capital firm 8VC. The deal marks a significant entry of American defense-tech capital into the African market, signaling a shift in how the continent’s security infrastructure may be built in the coming decade.
The $11.75m round will see 8VC Partner Alex Moore join the board. Moore’s firm is best known in the sector for backing western defense unicorns like Anduril and Epirus, suggesting that Terra is positioning itself as a similar “prime” contractor model for the African continent.
The sovereignty play
For decades, African defense procurement has been dominated by foreign state-backed entities. Hardware from China, Russia, and Europe currently makes up the bulk of the continent’s security assets—from border surveillance drones to maritime monitoring systems.
Terra Industries, founded in 2024 by Nathan Nwachuku and Maxwell Maduka, is pitching a reversal of this trend. The company argues that relying on foreign vendors has left African governments with fragmented systems, “black box” hardware that cannot be serviced locally, and vulnerabilities regarding data sovereignty.
“Before Terra, governments and operators across Africa were often forced to rely on foreign defense systems from China, Europe, and elsewhere,” says Maxwell Maduka, co-founder and CTO.
Maduka claims the company has already competed “head-to-head” with these global incumbents and won contracts by offering tighter hardware-software integration and, crucially, data sovereignty—ensuring sensitive security data remains within the jurisdiction of the client nation.
The ‘Prime’ model
Terra’s strategy mirrors the vertical integration model popularized by US defense tech firms. Rather than acting solely as a software vendor or a hardware manufacturer, Terra markets itself as a “defense prime.”
The core of their offering is ArtemisOS, a unified software platform designed to orchestrate large-scale security operations across land, air, and sea. This allows operators to manage diverse assets—such as autonomous surveillance drones and maritime sensors—through a single interface.
The company states its technology is currently deployed in critical sectors including energy, mineral resources, and counterterrorism operations.
The investor view
The investment from 8VC is a notable geopolitical signal. As Western investors have historically been hesitant to fund hardware-heavy defense startups in emerging markets, 8VC’s involvement suggests a growing appetite for “allied” defense technology in Africa to counter the influence of non-Western suppliers.
“Nathan and Maxwell have assembled a brilliant team to tackle a vital problem for the continent,” said Alex Moore, Partner at 8VC. “We are excited to support their mission.”
What’s next
The fresh capital is earmarked for three primary objectives:
- Manufacturing Expansion: Scaling local production capacity to reduce lead times compared to foreign imports.
- R&D: Expanding the engineering team to further develop the ArtemisOS software stack.
- Deployment: Increasing the number of autonomous systems active in what the company terms “allied African countries.”
Terra faces a steep challenge. While the “buy local” narrative is strong, displacing entrenched relationships between African governments and suppliers like China’s DJI or state-owned defense contractors will require consistent execution and reliability in high-stakes environments.
However, with US defense capital now on the cap table, Terra has secured the resources to attempt a significant restructuring of the African security market.

