Draft:Sintela
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Industry | Fibre-optic sensing |
---|---|
Founded | 16 October 2017[1] |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Magnus McEwen-King (CEO)[2] |
Revenue | ~£15 million[3] (2021) |
Number of employees | 42 (2022[3]) |
Website | sintela |
Sintela Limited is a United Kingdom-based company that develops fibre-optic sensing technology. Founded in 2017, the company is based in Bristol and has offices in Bristol, Dorchester, and the United States. It develops distributed fibre-sensing technology that is used for exploration and production in the oil industry, pipeline monitoring, railway and highway supervision, border and perimeter surveillance and for geoscience research.
History and leadership
[edit]Sintela was founded on 16 October, 2017[1] by Magnus McEwen-King and a group of four other co-founders, all of whom had worked together at QinetiQ, a defence contractor.[3] Initial funds were primarily self-financed.[3] According to The Times, Sintela made around £15 million in 2021, and sales had increased 2,800% over the previous four years.[3] In 2023, The Times ranked Sintela as the sixth-fastest growing company in the UK;[4] sales grew 231.4% from 2021 to 2023.[2] Sintela makes between 90%[2] and 95% of its revenue from exports,[3] and it manufactures products in the United Kingdom, United States, and India.[3]
In 2019, Austrian rail company Frauscher worked with Sintela to develop a DAS system for railways.[5] In 2022, Sintela announced a partnership with SLB to develop fibre-optic technology in the carbon capture and storage and geothermal industries.[6][7] In 2025, Sintela collaborated with the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute to develop a DAS system that can detect changes and disturbances on the seabed.[8]
Sintela has offices in England (Bristol and Dorchester) and the United States.[9] Its chief executive officer (CEO) is Magnus McEwen-King.[3] As of December 2022, the company employs 42 people.[3] Sintela also works in collaboration with other companies, including SLB and Sensonic. According to The Times, 350 people work in the partnership.[3]
Products
[edit]Sintela develops distributed fibre-sensing technology, which gives sensing function to fibre-optic cables.[3] According to The Times, Sintela technology is "used to monitor long, spread-out pieces of critical national infrastructure that require constant surveillance, including the US-Mexico border, oil pipelines and busy railway lines",[3] and to "track of the position of trains, identify damage to oil pipelines, and secure electricity pylons against metal theft".[2][10] In order to sell their product, Sintela partners with larger companies.[10]
Sintela's Onyx system is used on the Mexico–United States border.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Sintela Limited overview". gov.uk. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
- ^ a b c d "Sunday Times 100". The Sunday Times. June 30, 2023. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Wilson, Amy (28 December 2022). "Rising stars: three fast-growing manufacturers". The Times. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
- ^ Tyler, Richard (29 June 2023). "100 fastest-growing companies in Britain 2023 revealed". The Times. Retrieved 21 March 2025.
- ^ "New Era for Frauscher". Railway-News. 9 December 2019. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
- ^ Evans, Morgan (11 April 2022). "Schlumberger, Sintela Co-Developing Upstream, Midstream CCS Solutions". Natural Gas Intel. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
- ^ "Schlumberger, Sintela Plan To Spread Fiber-Optic Technology". Journal of Petroleum Technology. 4 April 2022. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
- ^ Nava, Raul (17 March 2025). "MBARI researchers deploy innovative new tech for seafloor monitoring". Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.
- ^ Arthur, Andrew (21 November 2022). "South West tech firms named among the 50 fastest growing in UK". Business Live. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
- ^ a b Tyler, Richard (29 June 2023). "What it's really like managing rapid growth". The Times. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
- ^ "Israel hopes technology will help it fight in Hamas's tunnels". The Economist. 8 November 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
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