
Global Energy Show Canada returns to Calgary from June 9 to 11, 2026, bringing substantial economic impact to the city and province while further solidifying Alberta’s position as a global leader in energy.
Hosted at Calgary’s BMO Centre, Global Energy Show Canada is the country’s largest energy marketplace and one of its most influential industry gatherings. The event will welcome more than 30,000 attendees, over 500 exhibitors, and delegates from more than 100 countries.
For Alberta’s technology community, the event is a showcase for the companies building the next generation of energy solutions. This year we’re highlighting a strong group of Alberta-based energy tech and clean energy companies working across AI, critical minerals, emissions reduction, industrial optimization, and immersive training.
Here’s a preview of 5 Alberta companies to watch at Global Energy Show Canada 2026.
Arcobi
Arcobi, formerly Arcus Power, offers a digital control platform for energy operations. Its tools combine clean power market data, AI forecasting, dispatch support, and asset-level automation. The platform is designed to help operators turn volatile grid and market conditions into actionable signals that can improve decisions, reduce manual handoffs, and capture value.
Cnergreen Corporation
Cnergreen is a Calgary clean technology company developing ArmorFoam, a nanoparticle-stabilized foam designed to improve the efficiency and environmental performance of oil recovery and CO2 injection operations. The system redirects injected fluids into under-swept reservoir zones, reducing excess water and gas cycling while lowering pumping, compression energy, and emissions intensity.
KOVR
KOVR gives this year’s Alberta list an Edmonton-based digital training story. The company has developed a virtual reality training simulator for the Aerial Bundle Extractor, specialized equipment used in energy and petrochemical settings. Built for Meta Quest 3, the platform combines equipment simulation, AI-assisted training, and performance analytics to make operator training safer and more scalable.
Litus
Calgary’s Litus Inc. has developed a nanotechnology-enabled lithium separation platform for both primary resources and recycled materials. Its LiNC technology targets lithium recovery from brines and industrial waters, while ReLiGN applies the same material science to battery recycling streams. The company is helping support more sustainable lithium supply chains for batteries and clean energy.
VL Energy
Calgary’s VL Energy is bringing AI into emissions monitoring, compliance, and industrial energy efficiency. Its software ecosystem replaces traditional emissions hardware with regulatory-grade AI, while its optimization platform uses predictive analytics to reduce energy use. Together, the platforms are designed to lower compliance costs, improve data availability, and reduce fuel and electricity consumption.
Together, these companies show the range of Alberta’s energy technology sector. Some are focused on software and AI. Others are advancing clean technology, critical minerals, emissions reduction, and workforce training.
That mix matters. As energy companies face pressure to improve efficiency, lower emissions, and move faster, Alberta’s tech companies are increasingly positioned to help solve practical problems across the sector.
You can visit globalenergyshow.com for more information or to register for the event. Stay tuned to Calgary.tech and CleanEnergy.ca for more coverage of Global Energy Show Canada 2026.


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