Goel has a detailed plan to build NordSpace into a sustainable commercial business.  

In June 2026, NordSpace aims to launch Terra-Nova, its first satellite. This mission will also test the company’s Athena bus, its Zephyr-EP propulsion system and its Chronos edge-AI camera in orbit.  

“Our goal is to be an end-to-end space missions’ company,” says Goel.  

“We’re building our own spaceport for the first time ever in Canada, we’re building our launch vehicles here and we’re building the stuff that’s going to go in the rockets as well. All so we have this full-cycle company.”  

Another aim for the company is to help solve problems on earth from space.   

“We’re launching satellites next year that help monitor Canadian forests and wildlife because that’s important,” says Goel.  

“That’s why we do what we do. We want to focus on things that help life on earth.”  

Goel says that one of the critical skills required in building viable businesses is to be comfortable with failure. As an example, he says that he originally tried to start NordSpace right after completing his undergrad in 2016.  

“Investors weren’t lined up to give millions of dollars to a recent graduate to build rockets,” he says.  

By waiting to launch NordSpace after the success of PheedLoop, Goel was able to create a company that is over 90% self financed, with recent support from the Canadian Space Agency and others contributing to technology development. 

“In the Hatchery, we thought failure was a good thing. It teaches you how to figure out how to do something better. Rahul understands that idea,” says Professor Jonathan Rose (ECE) who mentored Rahul while he was a student in the Hatchery.  

“He gets that when you’re going to start a company: it’s got to have value to someone who’s willing to pay money for it. It’s inspirational that he’s pursued his passion for space, but in a commercial way.”  

In between running NordSpace and working on his PhD, Goel is still finding ways to give back to his U of T community. This past September, he spoke to a crowd of future entrepreneurs at the Desjardins Speaker Series as part of U of T’s Acceleratorfest.  

“Make your idea exist first, then make it better,” says Goel.    

“Just start.”