Latest News

Photo: Hunt Energy
Amazon Leo has two new enterprise customers in logistics and energy operations, announcing deals for Crane Worldwide Logistics and Hunt Energy to adopt its satellite connectivity.
Amazon recently rebranded its Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) constellation from Project Kuiper to Amazon Leo as it ramps up launches. The constellation is expected to enter service for select enterprise customers by the end of this year, with a wider service rollout in 2026.
Crane Worldwide plans to implement Amazon Leo technology at select facilities for use cases like warehouse management, transportation tracking, and emergency communications. The company, based in Houston, Texas, said it will be the first global logistics provider to implement Amazon Leo.
Crane Worldwide is also an AWS customer — earlier this year, it announced plans to migrate its global infrastructure to the AWS cloud.
Also this week, Hunt Energy, based in Dallas, Texas, announced a strategic agreement with Amazon Leo to be one of the first energy customers for the constellation. Hunt plans to use Amazon Leo to establish private, secure connectivity across its operations to improve data collection capabilities from remote assets. The company said this will enable real-time monitoring and analytics.
“Hunt sees multiple use cases for Amazon Leo services to connect worksites and people to improve efficiency and simplify processes. Hunt will deploy Amazon Leo solutions across its multiple business units and divisions to transform how we operate,” CEO Hunter Hunt commented.
The constellation also recently secured a customer in agriculture, with Connected Farms planning to integrate Amazon Leo into a connectivity product for agriculture machines.
Stay connected and get ahead with the leading source of industry intel!
Subscribe Now