LEAP26

Immensa Secures New Funding to Revolutionise Spare Parts with Digital Innovation

Mohammed Fathy
Mohammed Fathy

4 min

Immensa raised new capital ahead of a planned Series B round.

It replaces warehouses with “Digital Parts Passports” and on-demand production.

Clients digitise inventories, cutting storage costs, emissions and supply chain delays.

Backers say it boosts Industry 4,0, resilience and near-shoring ambitions.

Funds will expand its platform, partners and global enterprise deployments.

Immensa, the Dubai-born deep-tech company rethinking how industrial spare parts are stored and produced, has secured new growth capital from Dubai Future District Fund (DFDF), Global Ventures and its existing investors. The funding comes as the company prepares for a planned Series B round and sharpens its international expansion plans.

At first glance, spare parts don’t sound very exciting. But speak to anyone in oil and gas or power generation and you quickly realise how critical they are. Warehouses packed with components that may never be used, that’s the old model. Immensa’s pitch is different. It replaces physical stockpiles with secure digital libraries of certified “Digital Parts Passports”. In simple terms, companies store designs digitally and manufacture parts only when needed, through a distributed production network that includes 3D printing.

I’ve seen founders in the region wrestle with supply chain delays that can bring million-dollar operations to a halt. It’s a bit of a faff, frankly. So the idea of producing qualified parts on demand, closer to where they’re needed, makes a lot of sense, especially in industries where downtime is painfully expensive.

Immensa, founded in Dubai, focuses largely on heavy industries such as oil and gas and power. By allowing clients to digitise inventories and produce parts on demand, it aims to reduce storage costs, carbon emissions and logistical headaches. The company maintains manufacturing operations in Dubai and Dammam, positioning them as centres of excellence while relying on a global network of qualified production partners.

Nader Albastaki, Managing Director of DFDF, said Immensa reflects the kind of advanced industrial technology aligned with Dubai’s D33 Economic Agenda. He pointed to its role in strengthening manufacturing capabilities, encouraging near-shoring and accelerating Industry 4.0 adoption. As he noted, the company demonstrates how deep-tech innovation built in Dubai can compete across markets in the Middle East, the United States and Europe.

Over time, Immensa has built a sizeable digital library of qualified spare parts, many redesigned specifically for additive manufacturing. Today it operates a subscription-based platform, where industrial clients store their spare parts inventories digitally and trigger production only when required. That shift, from shelves to servers, is subtle but powerful.

Noor Sweid, Founder and Managing Partner at Global Ventures, described Immensa as a company addressing core vulnerabilities in global supply chains. By localising advanced manufacturing while staying integrated into international networks, she said, the company is tackling how industries manage cost, disruption and inventory risk. On the flip side, it’s not just about efficiency; it’s about resilience, which has become spot on in today’s uncertain trade environment.

Fahmi Al Shawwa, Immensa’s Founder and CEO, has previously explained that the company was built to rethink how critical assets are supplied and maintained. Instead of warehouses filled with rarely used components, businesses can store parts digitally and produce them when and where they are needed. This latest investment, he said, supports the next phase of international growth and deeper collaboration with global industrial operators.

Immensa already works with major asset-heavy companies worldwide, underlining the global relevance of its model. The fresh capital will go towards further developing its digital platform, expanding its production partner network, and supporting large-scale enterprise deployments.

DFDF invests across early- to growth-stage technology sectors aligned with Dubai’s D33 agenda, including PropTech, HealthTech, LogisticsTech, DeepTech, Circular Economy and Web3. Its founding shareholders are Dubai International Financial Centre and Dubai Future Foundation.

For startups in the MENA region watching closely — and I know many Arageek readers do — this is more than another funding round. It’s a signal that deep industrial tech, not just flashy consumer apps, is getting serious backing. And believe it or not, that shift could be just as transformative for the region’s enterprenuers as any headline-grabbing unicorn.

🚀 Got exciting news to share?

If you're a startup founder, VC, or PR agency with big updates—funding rounds, product launches 📢, or company milestones 🎉 — AraGeek English wants to hear from you!

Read next

✉️ Send Us Your Story 👇

Read next