NEO and the Capital Mechanized Infantry Division will jointly develop, high-power battery technologies for military drones and unmanned systems.
Press Release + Noah Note

TORONTO — NEO Battery Materials Ltd., a silicon-enhanced battery developer for drones, robotics and physical AI, announced they have entered into a defence technology partnership agreement with the Republic of Korea (ROK) Army’s Capital Mechanized Infantry Division on Apr. 22.
The Capital Mechanized Infantry Division armoured combat unit tasked with defending the capital and conducting counter-offensive missions against North Korean threats.
Through the partnership, NEO and the Capital Mechanized Infantry Division will jointly develop, high-energy, high-power battery technologies for military drones and unmanned systems. The Capital Mechanized Infantry Division intends to deploy the company’s batteries directly to the division’s drone platforms for operator training and field use. Along with the 12th Infantry Division, this integration into a mechanized combat environment will impose strenuous, dynamic power requirements on drones and unmanned systems due to rapid maneuvers and multi-domain operations.
“Innovation of South Korea’s defence technology is highly dependent on the depth of collaboration between military and domestic industry. With the gradual implementation of autonomous solutions, high-performance, Korea-made batteries are no longer solely a procurement consideration but a national security priority. The Capital Mechanized Infantry Division is pleased to initiate work with NEO Battery to advance this priority through close operational integration,” said Major General Seong-gu Kim, Commander of the Capital Mechanized Infantry Division.
“With active defence collaboration spanning institutional, infantry, and mechanized units, NEO is building a diversified operational presence across multiple unit types and commands,” added Spencer Huh, President & CEO of NEO. “The Company will use this multi-engagement strategy as groundwork to penetrate battery supply relationships with higher echelons of command in the ROK Army and, ultimately, the Ministry of National Defense. These organizations’ procurement decisions will carry broader deployment scale and volume implications for NEO.”
Noah Note: I don't tend to discuss NEO when talking about stuff like CPSP bevause their South Korean parentage makes it a bit more complex than that. I will say though that NEO taking a step into degence more heavily, and Canada being an amchor to that, is importsnt in the context of future developments.
UAS, USV, UUV. All of them run off of battery or Cell systems. All of them are looked at to be critical tools in Canada’s future defence, and sadly the current battery supply chain, while getting better with the likes of Kraken and VoltaXplore, is still far off from the svale that we need it to be.
NEO has the capacity to really tackle at that, and so I support any effort they procide to jump into the space. Of course sure, fhis could be leveraged for CPSP, but I think downgrading it to an offset misses the actual picture here, at least to me.


