When battery technology moves from validation to defence market visibility, the stage matters. Novacium SAS, HPQ Silicon’s French technology partner, is scheduled to showcase a fully integrated European drone propulsion solution at Eurosatory 2026 alongside LN Innov’ and Groupe Zekat. Together, the partners are presenting a coordinated powertrain concept to defence and security industry participants from around the world. HPQ, which holds a 36.8% equity interest in Novacium and exclusive North American commercialization rights, is positioned to benefit from Novacium’s international progress and potential deployment opportunities across Canada, the United States, and Mexico. This is more than a trade show appearance. It is a commercial visibility moment for technologies moving toward defence, drone, and industrial markets. WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW Eurosatory Showcase: Novacium, LN Innov’, and Groupe Zekat are scheduled to exhibit at Eurosatory 2026, one of the world’s largest defence and security shows, with an Integrated Drone Propulsion System concept combining advanced batteries, electric motors, and intelligent electronic speed controllers. Sovereign Powertrain: The system is being developed around a European manufacturing and integration model, offering drone manufacturers and defence buyers a potential alternative to fragmented international supply chains. Defence Market Interest: According to the interview, Novacium is in ongoing discussions around battery applications for defence markets and may be in a position to showcase battery orders, demonstrations, or special order samples around Eurosatory 2026. Federal Validation: HPQ has announced up to $3 million in Canadian federal funding through Natural Resources Canada’s Energy Innovation Program to accelerate commercialization of its silicon based battery materials. Dual Revenue Path: HPQ benefits from Novacium’s progress through both its approximately 36.8% equity stake and its exclusive license to commercialize Novacium developed technologies across North America. STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS Defence procurement has long been shaped by complex supply chains. Drone manufacturers often source motors, batteries, and electronic control systems from different suppliers, sometimes across different continents. That model can create integration challenges, certification delays, logistical complexity, and exposure to geopolitical supply chain risk. The Integrated Drone Propulsion System is intended to address that challenge. By combining Novacium’s silicon enhanced lithium ion batteries, LN Innov’s electric propulsion motors, and Groupe Zekat’s intelligent electronic speed controllers into a unified European powertrain offering, the partners aim to reduce the integration burden for drone manufacturers. For defence and security buyers prioritizing operational security, supply reliability, and allied manufacturing, this represents a potential new option to evaluate. The timing is important. Drones have moved from niche tactical tools to widely used platforms across surveillance, reconnaissance, logistics, border security, and mission support applications. Eurosatory brings together senior military officials, procurement decision makers, government delegations, and defence industry participants from many countries, making it a relevant venue for technologies that combine performance, sovereignty, and potential certification pathways.