Nathan Nwachuku spent 2025 validating the ambitious thesis that has turned Terrahaptix into the go-to partner for securing the world’s critical infrastructure. Terrahaptix, which began in 2023 as a bold hardware experiment, has transformed into a thriving industrial force.
This year, under Nwachukwu’s direction, the company hit major milestones. It raised $1.2 million in venture capital funding and, in a striking victory, won a landmark $1.2 million contract to protect Nigerian hydroelectric plants, outmaneuvering Israeli rivals. Terrahptix also turned the tables on global trade, exporting its Nigerian-made drones to the United States while expanding its presence across South Africa, Ghana and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Yet the real story goes beyond deals and exports, at its Abuja factory, production for the flagship Archer VTOL and Duma ground drones doubled. The company’s proprietary software, Artemis OS enabled seamless, autonomous surveillance over thousands of miles of pipelines and remote mining sites.
Perhaps the most vivid proof of its progress came from the Kallon Sentry Tower in Nnewi. There, the system autonomously intercepted real threats, demonstrating in real time that African-engineered automation wasn’t just theoretical, it was ready, reliable, and already at work.








