Critical Infrastructure Technologies Ltd. (CSE: CTTT) (OTC: CITLF) (FRA: X9V), a developer of autonomous, high-capacity mobile communications and security platforms, has executed a Non-Disclosure Agreement with Aegis Critical Energy Defence Corp., a Canadian energy technology company specializing in advanced battery energy storage systems for defence, critical infrastructure, industrial, and AI data centre applications. The agreement establishes a framework for the two companies to exchange confidential information and evaluate potential collaboration opportunities across secure energy, digital platforms, and critical infrastructure applications.
Under the NDA, Aegis and CiTech will explore areas of mutual interest that may include secure and resilient energy systems, digital platforms and systems integration, critical infrastructure and defence-adjacent use cases, and public safety, emergency response, and national resilience initiatives. The Confidentiality Agreement does not commit either party to a transaction or partnership but enables structured discussions while protecting proprietary and sensitive information, to allow the completion of a Memorandum of Understanding.
"This agreement allows both organisations to assess how our respective capabilities could align in secure energy and digital domains," said Paul Dickson, CEO of Aegis. "It is an important step in responsibly exploring collaboration opportunities in regulated and critical infrastructure environments." Brenton Scott, CEO of CiTech, added, "CiTech works extensively in secure, mission-critical digital environments. This NDA provides an appropriate foundation to explore potential collaboration with Aegis while maintaining strong governance and information protection."
The collaboration could leverage CiTech's expertise in autonomous, rapidly deployable technology, such as its self-deploying platform designed to support LTE and other payloads like surveillance systems, detailed at https://www.citech.com.au. Aegis focuses on integrating advanced battery energy storage systems for mission-critical operations. The exploration comes as demand grows for resilient infrastructure solutions in sectors like defence, mining, and emergency services.
Neither the CSE nor its Regulation Services Provider accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release, which contains forward-looking information subject to risks and uncertainties. The original release can be viewed at https://www.newmediawire.com. This development highlights a strategic move toward enhancing secure, integrated solutions for critical infrastructure needs, with implications for national resilience and technological innovation in high-stakes environments.


