
Shared 05 November, 2025
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Infravision, the company transforming how power grids are built and maintained with aerial robotics, has raised $91 million in Series B funding led by GIC, with participation from Activate Capital and Hitachi Ventures, as well as existing investor Energy Impact Partners. The new capital will accelerate adoption of Infravision’s innovative power line stringing system—a faster, safer, and more cost-effective alternative to traditional ground and helicopter methods—as the world races to double grid infrastructure by 2040.
With traditional power infrastructure projects consistently delayed and over budget, Infravision is establishing a new standard in enabling the delivery of affordable, reliable, and secure energy. The company’s flexible, automated approach eliminates many of the contingencies and hazards inherent in conventional power line stringing methods, speeding project execution and reducing costs through its TX System—a fully integrated combination of drones, intelligent ground equipment, and stringing hardware already being used to deliver extra high-voltage transmission projects globally.
In its latest iteration, the system brings helicopter-level capabilities into a daily-use, truck-based fleet vehicle. Purpose-built for versatility, the Infravision system reduces outages, improves emergency response, and minimises community disruption in challenging conditions, addressing the urgent need for resilient, modern transmission networks as electricity demand surges.
“Infravision’s aerial robotics system has been proven on some of the largest and most complex power line projects in the world, including Powerlink Genex in Australia and emergency response deployments with PG&E in California,” said Cameron Van Der Berg, CEO of Infravision. “This investment will help us scale to provide a faster, safer, and more cost-effective way to meet surging electricity demand as the world races to double grid infrastructure by 2040.”
Infravision was founded in 2018 by Cameron Van Der Berg, a robotics engineer specialising in high-voltage electric power systems, and Chris Cox, a military veteran with extensive operational experience. Together, they built the company’s aerial robotics system from the ground up as an alternative to traditional power line stringing. Since launch, Infravision has delivered more than 40 major projects across four countries, saving utilities, contractors, and developers millions of dollars and thousands of work hours.
“Reliable, modern transmission infrastructure is foundational to the global energy transition,” said Swap Shah, Partner at Energy Impact Partners. “Infravision is solving one of the toughest challenges in that equation – how to scale grid buildout safely, affordably, and at the pace required to meet electrification, AI, and industrial growth. We’re proud to continue supporting the team as they expand in North America and beyond.”
With Australia established as a proven market, Infravision is now focused on expanding North American operations. The new capital significantly strengthens the company’s ability to hire world-class engineers and scale U.S. operations and manufacturing, with plans to partner with leading utilities, developers, and contractors across the U.S. to accelerate deployment of affordable transmission infrastructure at a crucial inflection point for the power industry.
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