(Venus Aerospace: Houston) -- Venus Aerospace has been selected for the World Economic Forum’s 2026 Technology Pioneers cohort, joining 100 early-stage companies recognized this year for their potential to reshape industries and address global challenges.
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Many of the technologies expected to shape the future, from advanced space infrastructure to new forms of global mobility, ultimately depend on the same foundational capability: propulsion. It determines how far systems can travel, how quickly they can move, what they can carry, and what new missions become possible.
Venus is working to expand those boundaries by turning a new class of rocket engine, the rotating detonation rocket engine (RDRE), into full propulsion systems for defense and space, with longer-term potential for new classes of high-speed flight.
The RDRE replaces traditional combustion with controlled detonation to burn fuel more efficiently. Long considered one of aerospace’s most promising but elusive propulsion concepts, it remained largely confined to testing and experimentation until 2025, when Venus became the first company to prove a high-thrust RDRE in flight. That milestone opened a path toward a new generation of aerospace systems.
“Frontier technologies matter most when they expand what people, industries, and nations can do,” says Sassie Duggleby, co-founder and CEO of Venus Aerospace. “For Venus, RDRE does not just represent a more efficient engine. It is a foundation for faster movement, more capable space systems, and new forms of connectivity across the planet. Being named a Technology Pioneer validates the potential of this technology to help shape a future where distance is less limiting.”
As a Technology Pioneer, Venus will participate in World Economic Forum initiatives and discussions during the next two years through the Forum’s Future of Space Community, contributing its perspective on the technologies shaping the future of aerospace.
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