Both RePower projects (SME Phase 1 and Phase 2) focused on maintenance-free fuel sources for wireless sensors, taking the concept from feasibility to market.
REMONI A/S
Danish SME developing maintenance-free wireless sensors powered by energy harvesting for industrial energy and power quality monitoring.
Their core work
ReMoni develops maintenance-free wireless sensor systems for energy and resource monitoring in industrial and building environments. Their core innovation is eliminating battery dependency in wireless sensors, using energy harvesting to power long-term monitoring without maintenance costs. They apply this technology to power quality surveillance and resource consumption tracking, helping facility operators detect failures and reduce waste without expensive wired infrastructure.
What they specialise in
The RePower Phase 2 project (EUR 1M+) developed cost-efficient energy harvesting to replace batteries in industrial sensor networks.
SnapToPowerQuality project developed low-cost clamp-on sensors to protect production facilities from power quality failures.
All three projects address different aspects of monitoring energy consumption and power quality in industrial or commercial settings.
How they've shifted over time
ReMoni began with a clear product-development trajectory: their 2015 SME Phase 1 feasibility study for battery-free wireless sensors led directly to the 2016-2018 Phase 2 scale-up, showing classic deep-tech SME progression. By 2020, they expanded from powering sensors to the application layer itself — monitoring power quality in production facilities. This shift from enabling technology (energy harvesting) to applied solution (power quality protection) suggests growing market maturity.
ReMoni is moving from hardware-level energy harvesting innovation toward applied industrial monitoring solutions, suggesting readiness for market-facing partnerships in smart factory and facility management domains.
How they like to work
ReMoni predominantly leads projects — they coordinated both RePower phases, demonstrating confidence in driving their own R&D agenda. Their participant role in SnapToPowerQuality (2020) shows willingness to contribute specialist sensor expertise to larger consortia. With only 6 unique partners across 3 projects, they operate in tight, focused teams rather than large multi-partner consortia.
A compact network of 6 partners across 4 countries, reflecting a focused SME that builds small, purpose-driven consortia rather than broad partnership webs. Their cross-border reach within Europe is modest but functional for their scale.
What sets them apart
ReMoni occupies a specific niche at the intersection of energy harvesting and industrial IoT — making wireless sensors that never need battery replacement. This is a practical, cost-driven differentiator: facility managers avoid ongoing maintenance costs while still getting continuous monitoring. For consortium builders, they bring a concrete hardware product rather than theoretical research, making them valuable where projects need demonstrated sensor technology.
Highlights from their portfolio
- RePowerSuccessfully progressed from SME Phase 1 feasibility (EUR 50K) to Phase 2 scale-up (EUR 1.05M), indicating strong technical validation by EU evaluators.
- SnapToPowerQualityRepresents ReMoni's expansion into applied power quality protection for production facilities, with EUR 637K funding as a consortium participant.