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What if monitoring the planet didn’t rely on satellites alone?

In this episode, Mathieu Johnson, CEO of Marble, explains how fast, small, and affordable drones could fundamentally change how we observe oceans, coastlines, and critical maritime activity. Growing up around aviation and skydiving, Mathieu developed an early passion for aerospace that later carried him through engineering studies, side projects at Airbus, and eventually into founding Marble.

Unlike traditional drones built for filming or short-range inspection, Marble’s aircraft are purpose-built for maritime surveillance. They fly fast, operate beyond visual line of sight, and use a five-camera sensor array to capture imagery across wide coastal areas. Mathieu explains why the ocean environment—fewer obstacles, simpler airspace constraints, and clearer computer vision challenges—creates a rare opportunity for scalable drone operations.

The conversation also dives into how 3D printing has been a critical enabler for Marble, allowing rapid design iteration and reduced assembly complexity. By keeping drones small, Marble preserves the full advantage of additive manufacturing in aerospace.

Beyond technology, Mathieu shares hard-earned leadership lessons from building in a difficult industry. Aerospace startups regularly disappear, and progress requires conviction, patience, and long-term commitment rather than hype or short-term ambition.

Looking ahead, Mathieu envisions a future where fleets of autonomous drones provide on-demand, real-time data—creating a living digital twin of the planet that supports environmental monitoring, safety, and better decision-making across industries.