Estonia’s tech investors take defence into their own hands as Russian threat looms
By Michael Kahn
PRAGUE (Reuters) – Estonia, a Baltic country of 1.4 million people that has long punched far above its weight in the tech sector, is now leading central and eastern Europe’s rush to fund defence projects spurred by Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
It is not hard to see why.
While heightened security concerns have boosted defence investment across Europe, nowhere is Russia’s threat perceived so acutely as in Estonia and its Baltic neighbours, which border Russia and spent decades under Moscow’s rule during the Soviet Union era.
“Philosophically, Estonians think about how to defend the country every day,” says tech entrepreneur Sten Tamkivi.
The early-stage Skype executive told Reuters the war spurred him and his London partners to tap their 800 million euro investment platform Plural – which also includes TransferWise co-founder Taavet Hinrikus – for defence projects and others that support European sovereignty.
“We never came into this saying we want to do defence but growing tension in NATO’s eastern flank is tactile,” Tamkivi said, noting a growing number of defence pitches and foreign investors scouring for opportunities in the sector.
“We need to solve the urgent problem of defence first,” he said.
For example, last July Plural joined the 450 million euro Series C funding in German AI company Helsing, which uses data to bolster defence, intelligence and national security systems, and has closed another defence deal so far in 2025.
According to data from Dealroom.co, the share of European defence tech investments has risen to 1.7% of venture capital funding in 2024 from just 0.4% in 2022, reaching nearly $1 billion.
Much of the money flows to western Europe but the number of funding rounds has tripled in central and eastern Europe since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Dealroom.co data showed.
European Union member Estonia plays an outsized role in its eastern flank. As a home to several tech Unicorns – startups that reached a $1 billion valuation, such as Skype, Bolt, TransferWise and others – it has minted scores of wealthy tech executives with the financial heft to support emerging defence companies.
Its proximity to Ukraine also allows close cooperation with front-line units there to quickly test and tweak technology while the privately-funded groups in the Baltic nation are able to invest in purely military technologies. In contrast, in Poland – the region’s biggest economy and major provider of military aid to Kyiv – many venture firms receive public funding which prevents them from directly financing military projects.
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