Suppliers, manufacturers and contractors

Ultimarii Ltd. is a Canadian-built, AI-enabled regulatory intelligence platform serving government and highly regulated industries, including energy, utilities, mining, and infrastructure. We transform complex, document-heavy regulatory processes into structured, auditable workflows that improve speed, consistency, and decision quality using advanced AI and curated regulatory data. Our platform is purpose-built for government environments, with Canadian data residency, role-based access controls, audit logging, and alignment with federal security and AI governance standards.

Where is your company located?

Ultimarii is headquartered in Calgary, Alberta, at the heart of Canada’s energy sector. Founded by professionals with deep roots in Alberta’s legal and regulatory landscape, Ultimarii serves clients across the energy, utility, mining, and legal industries throughout Canada and beyond. The company’s team spans software development, machine learning, data science, and regulatory expertise — all working together to fast-track compliance and reduce bureaucratic friction for professionals in highly regulated industries.

How many employees do you have?

Ultimarii is a lean and growing team of approximately 30 professionals, bringing together legal professionals, regulatory specialists, software engineers, ML scientists and data specialists. All united by a shared mission to reduce friction in highly regulated industries to ensure we can build Canada faster.

What are the company’s priority over the next five years?

Expand our reach across North America, serving project development around the globe. We are building the world’s largest and most robust regulatory reference dataset and the largest suite of regulatory specific AI agents to support the critical workflows energy companies manage every day.

What opportunities and challenges does your company face?

Ultimarii’s greatest opportunity is helping Canada’s energy sector move faster at a moment when the world needs dependable Canadian energy, resilient infrastructure, and clearer pathways to project development. One challenge is that large enterprises adopt AI carefully. Security, change management, trust, and workflow integration matter as much as the technology itself. Our focus is on turning that adoption challenge into an advantage by delivering practical, enterprise-ready AI that fits how regulated energy teams actually work.

In your opinion, what will be the role of natural gas in the next 50 years?

Natural gas will increasingly be judged not just by its emissions profile, but by the role it plays in a stable and responsible energy system. Over the next 50 years, we see evidence that it will support reliability as power demand rises, enable industrial activity that cannot easily be electrified, and provide energy security to allies through LNG. The sector’s challenge and opportunity will be proving that gas infrastructure can be developed faster to meet the growing demand.