German deeplify raises €2M to modernise infrastructure inspections

The newly secured funding will be used to further develop the platform and support its deployment across sectors including energy, oil and gas, chemicals, and transportation.
German deeplify raises €2M to modernise infrastructure inspections

German industrial AI startup deeplify has announced the successful closing of a €2 million pre-seed funding round. The round was led by D11Z Ventures, with participation from Vanagon Ventures, EWOR, and a group of strategic business angels. The investment will support the company’s mission to modernise how critical infrastructure is inspected and managed.

The company addresses a longstanding gap in industrial operations. While recent advances in artificial intelligence have largely focused on productivity tools and digital services, many sectors responsible for maintaining essential infrastructure still rely on fragmented and outdated processes. Inspection workflows often depend on spreadsheets, static documents, analogue imagery, and manual reporting, despite the high risks associated with undetected defects.

We have the most advanced software for digital-first workflows, but when it comes to determining if a high-pressure pipeline is safe, the industry is often still stuck in the past,

said Jan Löwer, co-founder and CEO of deeplify.

The need for modernisation is increasing as Europe’s chemical sector, comprising around 31,000 companies, faces ageing infrastructure, a shortage of experienced inspectors, and growing volumes of complex inspection data.

To address this, deeplify has developed an end-to-end AI platform for industrial inspection and asset integrity management. By connecting workflows from raw sensor data to automated defect analysis and auditable reporting, the platform replaces fragmented processes with a unified system, helping reduce inspection time, minimise errors, and improve traceability.

The solution is grounded in real-world industrial experience. Early projects revealed significant inefficiencies in existing workflows, leading to an initial deployment with Open Grid Europe. Further pilots with SKF followed, and the platform is now used by inspection firms serving global energy companies such as Shell.

The newly secured funding will be used to expand deeplify’s platform capabilities and accelerate deployments across sectors, including energy, oil and gas, chemicals, and transportation.

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