logo
ElectraLith Selected As A Top Innovator By The World Economic Forum

ElectraLith Selected As A Top Innovator By The World Economic Forum

Globe and Mail15-05-2025

Summary: ElectraLith has been recognized as one of eight top innovators globally by the World Economic Forum, which described its DLE-R technology as "deeply inspiring" and a leading solution advancing the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia--(Newsfile Corp. - May 15, 2025) - The World Economic Forum today announced that ElectraLith Pty Ltd ("ElectraLith") is a winner of the highly prestigious Sustainable Mining: Mining the Unmined Challenge. In its selection, the World Economic Forum identified ElectraLith's next-generation DLE-R technology as one of the most promising solutions driving progress toward achieving the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals.
Image: ElectraLith's DLE-R
To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/9100/252093_26373037f4061900_001full.jpg
As part of the challenge, ElectraLith was selected by UpLink as one of eight Top Innovators advancing groundbreaking technologies that maximize the recovery of metals and minerals from ores and non-primary sources, reducing the need for fresh extraction to meet future raw material demands. Uplink is the World Economic Forum's innovation platform with a mission to enable an innovation ecosystem driving positive systemic change for people and the planet.
The World Economic Forum commented: "We are deeply inspired by ElectraLith's solution and excited to help ElectraLith scale its impact."
As a Top Innovator, ElectraLith will benefit from a three-year curated Engagement Programme that includes high-profile events, global visibility and access to networks of potential partners, collaborators and investors. The Engagement Programme is intended to significantly enhance ElectraLith's ability to rapidly scale DLE-R to create a lasting and positive impact on global sustainability challenges.
Charlie McGill, ElectraLith's CEO, commented: "It is a genuine honor to receive this special recognition from the World Economic Forum. Our team is dedicated to delivering the cleanest method of extracting and refining lithium from any source, unlocking lithium's full potential to deliver a sustainable future. This recognition validates that DLE-R is on track to make an important and measurable impact that directly addresses the global sustainability challenges identified by the United Nations."
McGill continued: "DLE-Rs' ability to extract and refine lithium from any source without water is its true differentiator. It means we can unlock lithium in regions where water is extremely scarce, such as in the Andes where the vast majority of the world's lithium reserves can be found. It's estimated that more than 60% of all water in this region is used for lithium extraction, having a devastating impact on the environment and its indigenous communities."
Jun Qu, ElectraLith Director and Main Sequence Investment Manager, commented: "Ensuring sustainable access to critical resources is one of Main Sequence's key priorities. Lithium is central to the energy transition, but there is a significant innovation gap that needs to be bridged before we can sustainably supply the battery-grade materials needed at scale. ElectraLith is closing that gap. Its single-step, cost-effective process is capable of producing battery-grade lithium directly from any source."
Based on technology invented at Monash University by Sir John Monash Distinguished Professor Huanting Wang, ElectraLith's DLE-R system uses proprietary electrochemical technology to extract and refine lithium in an end-to-end, modular and scalable system. It is the only Direct Lithium Extraction ("DLE") process that requires no water or chemicals, and the only DLE process able to directly produce refined lithium for the battery market, eliminating dependence on third party refining. By removing these externalities, DLE-R is rapidly emerging as the cleanest, most versatile and most-cost-efficient method to extract and refine lithium from any source.
The World Economic Forum's recognition follows the December 2024 close of a materially oversubscribed Series A funding round of A$27.5m led by Main Sequence and supported by a world-class investor syndicate comprising Rio Tinto, Chevron Technology Ventures, Marathon Petroleum, Vista Energy, In-Q-Tel, IP Group, Fathom Fund, Hostplus, Breakthrough Victoria and Monash University.
Information: media@electralith.com
About ElectraLith
ElectraLith is unlocking a green future with the cleanest, most versatile and most cost-efficient method of extracting and refining lithium, the fundamental element of a sustainable future. ElectraLith's cutting-edge DLE-R technology revolutionises the DLE and refining industry by extracting and producing battery-grade lithium hydroxide or carbonate in a single, scalable and modular step. As opposed to other DLE processes, DLE-R fully eliminates the need for water and chemicals and can run entirely on renewable energy.
ElectraLith is based in Melbourne, Australia, and Washington, DC.
https://www.electralith.com
About Main Sequence
Main Sequence is tackling the world's biggest challenges by turning today's scientific discoveries into tomorrow's industries. Main Sequence was founded by CSIRO in Australia in 2017. It now has $1Bn funds under management to help build and invest in companies that are solving our greatest planetary challenges.
https://www.mseq.vc
To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/252093

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elon Musk has left the building. But the teardown of the nation-state continues
Elon Musk has left the building. But the teardown of the nation-state continues

Globe and Mail

time16 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Elon Musk has left the building. But the teardown of the nation-state continues

Susi Geiger is professor of markets, organizations and society at University College Dublin's Michael Smurfit Graduate Business School. It's perhaps for the best that U.S. President Donald Trump and Tesla's Elon Musk have had such a dramatic falling out. But this does little to fix the damage wrought by Mr. Musk or the wider disruption he represents. A few weeks into the tumultuous reign of the (recently banished) U.S. Department of Government Efficiency captain, medical historian Mike Magee wrote a blog post titled 'Disruption For the Sake of Disruption Is Not Innovation.' It aptly escribes the 'hostile takeover' of government departments in the U.S. by private industry interests and the interruptions of state functions this has caused. Silicon Valley has long been known to elevate disruption as a virtue that lead to innovation. What this ideology misses is the fact that to reach that positive outcome, a great deal of institutional framing is necessary. When it's institutions themselves that one is disrupting, as Mr. Musk and colleagues have aimed to do, this can only lead to productivity gains if another 'frame' can scaffold the journey from disruption into innovation. What do the architects of disrupting government functions have in mind that might replace the institutional scaffolding they are dismantling? The answer, in tech terms, is mostly data infrastructure and platforms. While this seems a sensible move in our digital age at face value, it could, if driven to an extreme, jeopardize the very existence of what we know as a nation-state. Unlikely Trump-Musk bromance implodes in real time over social media Analysis: For Trump and Musk, breaking up wasn't all that hard Big Data and Big Tech firms have replaced many of our social relationship with digitally mediated ones, becoming a 'network society,' coined by sociologist Manuel Castells more than 20 years ago. In the past few months, we have witnessed a further evolution of the network society, one where our institutions are being slowly replaced with data flows and data infrastructures. Some in the tech community have dreamed of a 'network state' for years, one where all conventional state functions run through digital interfaces. In the extreme, this concept would even dissolve the notion of citizenship as bounded to a national territory; it would allow individuals to 'choose your nationality like you choose your broadband provider,' according to American entrepreneur and investor Balaji Srinivasan, one of the chief promoters of the network state. The idea is that an internet community comes together and pools cryptocurrency to purchase land that is mutualized through Blockchain ownership. On this land, the community builds its own state, governed by its own rules, which again are tokenized and mutualized through Blockchain. There have been a few of these projects springing up across the world, including Peter Thiel's SeaSteading Institute, which seeks to build a community in extraterritorial parts of the oceans so that they would not be subject to any state rule. These individual pockets of network communities, run on Blockchain, would then be connected to what proponents envisage as an archipelago of sovereign, 'citizen'-owned states. 'We can build a 1-10M person startup society with a genuine sense of national consciousness, an integrated cryptocurrency, and a plan to crowdfund many pieces of territory,' Mr. Srinivasan wrote in 2022. He added: 'We can digitally sew these disjoint enclaves together into a new kind of polity that achieves diplomatic recognition.' While this is extreme and perhaps still fantastical, tech firms have increasingly infiltrated themselves in what used to be core state functions, including data infrastructure firms such as Thiel-backed firm Palantir, which hold simultaneous government contracts for functions as diverse as border control and security and health care in many Western countries. These data firms aim to make the state essentially redundant, replacing its institutions entirely with privately-controlled data infrastructures. What we are really dealing with when we talk about how the likes of Mr. Musk 'disrupt' state functions is a step toward a techno-optimist globalization. The end game: to make nation-states obsolete, and with them all those transnational organizations that might stand in the way of the 'free market' and that seek to protect citizen rights. Governments signing over important state assets or public goods provisions to private firms risks precipitating their own demise. Of course, many government functions can do with some innovation, and digitalization is part of this in many different ways. In health, for instance, a nationwide electronic health infrastructure reduces duplication and waste, and significantly increases productivity and resource allocation. However, we cannot allow state asset stripping, and we should not condone disruption for disruption's sake, particularly when it comes to our democratic institutions. This needs to start with the business community stopping the worship of the concept of disruption. Innovation is at its most powerful when it combines those parts of our institutions that have stood the test of time with new, creative approaches – rather than 'deleting' or 'disrupting' them just for the sake of doing so.

At a time when large residential construction has stalled, this developer is pushing forward with a big Burnaby project
At a time when large residential construction has stalled, this developer is pushing forward with a big Burnaby project

Vancouver Sun

time17 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

At a time when large residential construction has stalled, this developer is pushing forward with a big Burnaby project

At a time when an uncertain economy has delayed or cancelled residential projects, one developer is pushing forward on a major project in Burnaby's Brentwood neighbourhood. Grosvenor has begun excavation on the first phase of construction on about three city blocks across from the Brentwood shopping mall and the Brentwood Town Centre SkyTrain station. The Brentwood Block project will include a 41-storey condo tower, a community centre, and two rental towers, including a 60-storey one that will be Western Canada's tallest all-rental building. 'There are lots of reports on slower sales in the first quarter of this year and I think it's clear that that's attributed to the uncertainty that entered the picture at the beginning of this year. Timing is always relevant in anything related to real estate,' said Marc Josephson, senior vice-president of development at Grosvenor. Stay on top of the latest real estate news and home design trends. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Westcoast Homes will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. But there are reasons Grosvenor is feeling hopeful enough to proceed: When it launched sales for the condo tower last fall, it sold 100 units in 30 days; the project involves a mix of uses and isn't only focused on residential condos; and the company has access to capital. Grosvenor is proceeding while other projects have stalled because they didn't sell a certain percentage of presale contracts and, therefore, were unable to qualify for construction financing. The London-based company was founded in 1677 when it started buying some of the most expensive real estate in that city's Mayfair and Belgravia areas, which it still owns. It now manages investments for the 7th Duke of Westminster, one of the world's wealthiest people under the age of 40 based on land, property and other assets. The company has been operating in North America for more than 70 years, beginning with its purchase of Annacis Island in Delta in 1952. In October 2024, Grosvenor announced it had joined with a Canadian pension fund and Victoria-based investment firm Westerkirk Capital to raise $1.5 billion in capital to fund the Brentwood Block project, explaining that capital market partnerships like this are necessary for successful development. At the moment, many potential buyers of presale condos are waiting rather than buying. The number of unsold condo units that are complete or nearing completion and unsold is rising and prominent real estate marketing companies are cutting staff. As of April, there were 2,503 condo units that were complete and unsold, and another 2,337 units in projects nearing completion that were unsold for a total of 4,840 units in Metro Vancouver, according to research by Rennie Intelligence. Boffo Developments Ltd. told The Globe and Mail it launched the first of what is meant to be a four-tower development last July, but only sold 44 of the 318 units by December before sales dropped off completely so it's decided to return deposits with interest and wait for better conditions. Allure Ventures is offering to buy back or rent out units at today's prices in a Surrey tower where it is aiming to begin construction. Some 200 people lined up when Square Nine Developments recently offered a one-day, steep discount of 25 per cent off original prices for units that have been completed at its Belvedere Surrey condo tower. Josephson said it's hard to read too much into what these cases say about the broader market. 'I think it's important to recognize that each development and each sub-market has nuances. Is the development big or small? Is it condo, rental, commercial, public, mixed? What's the price point? What are the characteristics of the developer and how well does this specific product match consumers' expectation for that location?' He said Grosvenor launched sales of presale units in the 41-storey Brentwood Block residential strata tower in the fall of 2024 and to date, has sold about 135 units — or 30 per cent — of the building's 451 units. This year, economic uncertainty has slowed sales, but the impact is 'likely more short-term in nature,' he said. 'There's been a lot of negative attention in the market right now related to condo sales and that's understandable, but again, it's about the first part of this year,' said Josephson. 'If you're launching a stand-alone condo building right at this moment, that's a difficult proposition and there's clearly systemic issues on the cost and policy side that need to be addressed. The demand is still there. It's just waiting on the sidelines for evidence of stability.' He adds that even though there are increasing signs of unsold inventory of presale units, Grosvenor believes the region will continue to have a structural supply shortage long-term. 'The benchmark price is only about four to six per cent below the peak in 2022. It's not as if it's a supply problem that is resulting in desperate selling that's dropping pricing. We're not seeing that.' He adds that 2021 was a record-setting year for sales, so to have some more inventory than the market is used to isn't necessarily a surprise. jlee-young@

The $12.6 Billion Quantum Leap: High-Potential Stocks Under $10 (ZENA, SKYT, LAES, BTQQF)
The $12.6 Billion Quantum Leap: High-Potential Stocks Under $10 (ZENA, SKYT, LAES, BTQQF)

Globe and Mail

time19 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

The $12.6 Billion Quantum Leap: High-Potential Stocks Under $10 (ZENA, SKYT, LAES, BTQQF)

Quantum computing is emerging as one of the most promising frontiers in technology today. Unlike traditional computers that use bits as the smallest unit of data, quantum computers use quantum bits or qubits, which can exist in multiple states simultaneously. This allows quantum systems to tackle complex problems far beyond the capabilities of classical computers, solving them faster and more efficiently. While often overshadowed by the hype around artificial intelligence, quantum computing is steadily gaining traction. It is driving breakthroughs in areas such as machine learning, image and speech recognition, and optimization problems. The technology's potential is attracting significant investor attention, with some betting it could spark growth on par with the AI revolution. The market for quantum computing is expanding rapidly. According to Fortune Business Insights, the global quantum computing market was valued at $885 million in 2023 and is expected to soar to over $12.6 billion by 2032, growing at an annual rate of nearly 35 percent. This rapid growth highlights the sector's rising importance and opportunity. Within this dynamic landscape, smaller high-tech companies trading under $10 often have the potential to become breakout performers. They offer investors a chance to get in early on the next wave of innovation without the high price tag of established giants. Now, let us explore some of the promising rising stocks in this fast-growing quantum computing sector. Among the most compelling under-the-radar quantum computing stocks under $10, ZenaTech (Nasdaq: ZENA) stands out with its rare blend of AI drone technology, Drone as a Service (DaaS), enterprise software, and quantum innovation. The company reported an impressive 92 percent year-over-year revenue growth in the first quarter of 2025, climbing to $1.13 million from $591,379 in Q1 2024. This surge was driven by organic momentum and key acquisitions in drone services and enterprise software, showcasing a firm that is not only scaling but strategically positioning itself in rapidly expanding markets. ZenaTech operates through its drone-focused subsidiary ZenaDrone and a growing network of global offices in North America, Europe, Taiwan, and the UAE. It develops autonomous AI-powered drones capable of integrating machine learning, predictive modeling, and now, quantum computing. These drones are already in field use across agriculture, logistics, defense, and surveillance applications. But the company's most ambitious and potentially disruptive initiative is its Clear Sky project, which combines AI drone swarms with quantum computing to transform how we predict and respond to extreme weather events. The Clear Sky project aims to address a growing global challenge. In 2024 alone, there were 58 separate billion-dollar weather disasters, including 27 in the United States. These included hurricanes, floods, wildfires, and storms that caused $417 billion in global losses, according to Gallagher Re. ZenaTech's solution uses coordinated drone fleets outfitted with advanced sensors to collect real-time atmospheric data across different layers of the sky. The data is then processed using quantum computing systems that can handle massive, complex datasets at unprecedented speed and resolution. 'Drones with sensors flying at high altitudes can collect data in real time, enabling greater spatial and temporal resolution,' said CEO Shaun Passley, Ph.D. 'This results in more precise, up-to-the-minute weather insights to better anticipate the onset of extreme weather like tornadoes.' AI drone swarms enhance the frequency and localization of measurements, delivering a leap forward in meteorological forecasting capabilities and early disaster warnings. In addition to weather forecasting, ZenaTech is now using this same AI-quantum fusion to address wildfire threats in the US West. The company's drones, equipped with thermal and multispectral sensors and 360-degree LiDAR, are deployed across hundreds of square miles to simulate wildfire spread and optimize emergency responses. A newly acquired land surveying firm in Oregon and partnerships with Native American communities in Wyoming support this initiative, enhancing field data collection and real-world testing environments. The first quarter also marked major product milestones, including the third-generation ZenaDrone 1000 entering scalable production, and the IQ Square drone moving to manufacturing. ZenaTech began work on a heavy-lift, gas-powered ZD 1000 variant for US defense applications and initiated testing of a high-density drone battery and proprietary communications system. The company also ramped up hiring, bringing on 35 new engineers and technicians to expand drone development in the UAE and opened a new drone testing facility in Turkey. ZenaTech's enterprise software business is also advancing, highlighted by its acquisition of Othership, a UK-based workplace management platform. This complements its SaaS offerings and introduces AI and quantum productivity tools aimed at government and business clients. While expenses rose in the first quarter due to rapid expansion, hiring, and R&D investment, the long-term strategy is clear. ZenaTech is building a platform company with national and international scale across drone hardware, software, and quantum-driven analytics. The company is preparing for Green and Blue UAS certification, a necessary step to access US military contracts, and is developing secure, certifiable drone sensors in Taiwan. ZenaTech (Nasdaq: ZENA) is a rare sub-$10 stock with exposure to multiple exponential technologies. With nearly doubled revenues, expanding drone deployments, growing defense ties, and pioneering work in quantum-enhanced weather and wildfire response, the company offers high-upside potential in one of the most dynamic corners of the tech market. SkyWater Technology (NASDAQ: SKYT) is emerging as a pivotal player in the push to restore and expand secure U.S. semiconductor manufacturing. With shares still trading under ten dollars, the company has quietly built serious momentum on multiple fronts, including next-generation quantum breakthroughs, boardroom reinforcements, and a major upcoming acquisition that could reshape its production capabilities. One of SKYT's biggest catalysts came in March when partner D-Wave Quantum published peer-reviewed research in Science validating quantum supremacy in simulation. The research used superconducting qubits fabricated by SkyWater, and the prototype processor outperformed one of the most powerful classical supercomputers in modeling magnetic materials. This milestone underscored SkyWater's role in enabling a major leap in quantum computing. CEO Thomas Sonderman called it 'an unprecedented innovation' and emphasized the importance of expanding foundational node infrastructure in the United States. The partnership between D-Wave and SKYT spans more than a decade, and SkyWater's advanced capabilities in custom material deposition and large-scale fabrication were essential to commercializing the breakthrough. Leadership changes are also adding weight to the bull case for SKYT. In April, the company added three seasoned executives to its board, including Timothy Baxter, former CEO of Samsung North America, who is set to become board chair. Baxter brings deep strategic experience in emerging technologies like AI, 5G, and cloud infrastructure. He is joined by Tammy Miller, a former lieutenant governor and longtime CEO of Border States Electric, and Andrew LaFrence, a former KPMG partner and CFO with life sciences and government manufacturing experience. According to Sonderman, these additions strengthen the company's ability to accelerate its expansion strategy and navigate a fast-changing landscape. SkyWater also appointed Dr. Percy Gilbert as senior vice president of engineering. With a technical background that includes IBM, NXP, and Motorola, Gilbert will play a key role in scaling operations and supporting SKYT's growth in wafer services and advanced technology. Notably, he steps in as the company prepares to close its acquisition of Infineon's Fab 25 facility in Austin. Backed by a supply agreement valued above one billion dollars, this deal could prove transformational. Management believes Fab 25 is uniquely positioned to provide the scale and process flexibility needed to meet foundational semiconductor demand, while aligning tightly with national supply chain security goals. Financially, SkyWater (NASDAQ: SKYT) reported strong sequential growth in wafer services during the first quarter of 2025, driven by adoption of its new ThermaView platform among defense contractors. While budget delays in Washington have temporarily softened the outlook for advanced technology services, management remains confident in year-over-year revenue growth for both business segments and expects to deliver strong adjusted EBITDA and positive non-GAAP EPS for the full year. With the Infineon deal expected to close by mid-year and a ramp in advanced packaging revenues coming in the second half, SkyWater looks well-positioned to unlock meaningful long-term upside. SEALSQ Corp (NASDAQ: LAES) stands out in the post-quantum technology space by developing advanced hardware and software solutions that safeguard against the emerging threat of quantum computing. Their products combine semiconductors, public key infrastructure (PKI), and provisioning services, emphasizing the highest-level quantum-resistant cryptography designed to replace vulnerable traditional encryption methods like RSA and ECC. In May 2025, SEALSQ announced that its flagship QVault Trusted Platform Module (TPM) achieved compliance with ML-DSA-87 and ML-KEM-1024 — the most secure NIST-standardized algorithms (CRYSTALS-Dilithium and CRYSTALS-Kyber) currently available for post-quantum cryptography. These algorithms provide AES-256 equivalent security and are tailored for defense, IoT, and automotive markets that demand the strongest protection for firmware signing, secure communications, and device authentication. The QVault TPM offers a tamper-resistant environment to shield cryptographic keys and operations, certified to stringent standards like FIPS 140-2/3 and Common Criteria EAL5+. Beyond hardware, LAES is pushing boundaries with its space-based quantum initiatives. The company is set to lead the world's first space-based Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) proof-of-concept through the June 2025 launch of WISeSat 2.1. This mission embeds SEALSQ's Quantum RootKey technology into a satellite, paving the way for ultra-secure, sovereign quantum-resistant satellite communications. The WISeSat constellation, backed by a $10 million SEALSQ investment, promises to extend quantum-safe communications and decentralized IoT transactions globally, including remote areas where traditional networks struggle. SEALSQ is also expanding its impact in consumer IoT. Recently, global smart home leader Hager selected SEALSQ's PKI-as-a-Service platform, INeS, to provide device attestation certificates for its Matter-compliant smart home products. INeS delivers post-quantum secure certificates, ensuring long-term protection for billions of connected devices in the smart home ecosystem. With rising cyber threats and the quantum computing horizon looming, SEALSQ's integrated approach across semiconductors, satellite communications, and IoT security positions it as a key player in the next generation of unbreakable digital trust. BTQ Technologies Corp. (OTCQX: BTQQF) is emerging as a serious contender among the rising quantum stocks under $10. Founded by a team of post-quantum cryptographers, the company is building a platform that bridges cryptographic software with purpose-built hardware to defend against the future threats of large-scale universal quantum computers. Recent developments highlight BTQ's commitment to both technical innovation and global engagement. In April, BTQQF signed a Memorandum of Understanding with EntangleTech, a leading quantum education organization in Taiwan. The partnership will support the creation of educational content focused on quantum computing and emerging technologies. BTQ is contributing both funding and expertise, helping EntangleTech produce accessible materials such as videos and podcasts designed to boost quantum literacy. This move underscores BTQ's commitment to public education and international collaboration, positioning the company as a global voice in the quantum space. Shortly after, BTQ announced another MOU with Quandela, a photonic quantum computing company based in France. Together, they will test BTQ's Quantum Sampling Proof-of-Work protocol, a quantum-secure and energy-efficient alternative to traditional blockchain mining. If successful, this collaboration could lay the foundation for a more sustainable and quantum-resilient blockchain future. It also opens the door for commercial applications of Quandela's Belenos quantum processor within BTQ's protocol. More recently, BTQ signed an agreement with ICTK, a South Korean semiconductor security firm known for its PUF-based chip technologies. This partnership will explore the joint development of secure cold wallets and other hardware solutions using BTQ's proprietary CASH architecture. The system is capable of processing up to one million digital signatures per second and encrypting data up to five times faster than competing solutions. Compact, energy-efficient, and quantum-ready, CASH is designed to protect vital systems in finance, telecom, identity, and embedded devices. BTQ Technologies Corp. is not only advancing the science of post-quantum cryptography but also securing partnerships and infrastructure that could give it a real edge in the quantum transition. For investors seeking long-term exposure to quantum resilience and security innovation, BTQ stands out as a stock to watch. Disclaimers: RazorPitch Inc. "RazorPitch" is not operated by a licensed broker, a dealer, or a registered investment adviser. This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be investment advice. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 provides investors a safe harbor in regard to forward-looking statements. Any statements that express or involve discussions with respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, goals, assumptions, or future events or performances are not statements of historical fact and may be forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on expectations, estimates, and projections at the time the statements are made that involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from those presently anticipated. Forward-looking statements in this action may be identified through the use of words such as projects, foresee, expects, will, anticipates, estimates, believes, understands, or that by statements indicating certain actions & quote; may, could, or might occur. Understand there is no guarantee past performance will be indicative of future results. Investing in micro-cap and growth securities is highly speculative and carries an extremely high degree of risk. It is possible that an investor's investment may be lost or impaired due to the speculative nature of the companies profiled. RazorPitch has been retained and compensated by ZenaTech Ltd. to assist in the production and distribution of content related to ZENA. RazorPitch is responsible for the production and distribution of this content. It should be expressly understood that under no circumstances does any information published herein represent a recommendation to buy or sell a security. This content is for informational purposes only; you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice. Nothing contained in this article constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, endorsement, or offer by RazorPitch or any third-party service provider to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments. All content in this article is information of a general nature and does not address the circumstances of any particular individual or entity. Nothing in this article constitutes professional and/or financial advice, nor does any information in the article constitute a comprehensive or complete statement of the matters discussed or the law relating thereto. RazorPitch is not a fiduciary by virtue of any persons use of or access to this content. Media Contact Company Name: RazorPitch Contact Person: Mark McKelvie Email: Send Email City: NAPLES State: Florida Country: United States Website:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store