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Canada and Poland to Cooperate on Defence Project Under SAFE Agreement

Updated
Jun 19, 2026 9:32 AM
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Canada and Poland to Cooperate on Defence Project Under SAFE Agreement

Polonez News

Prime Minister Mark Carney announced that the first Canadian company has been awarded a contract under the SAFE defence agreement signed between Canada and the European Union. The project also has an important Polish connection, as it will be carried out in cooperation with the Polish company Enamor International.

The contract was awarded to Marconi Technologies, a Montreal-based company that will supply Canadian-made tactical radios for the Polish military. According to the Prime Minister’s Office, the contract is worth more than $10 million.

The Polish partner in the project will be Enamor International, a company founded in Warsaw in 2013 by a team of managers and engineers. The company operates in the ICT sector and specializes in cybersecurity, network technologies, radio technologies, and solutions for both civilian and military markets.

Enamor International designs and implements cybersecurity systems, secure IP networks, radio communication systems, software, and electronic solutions. The company works with critical infrastructure organizations, the military sector, and projects involving classified information.

The company is certified to trade in dual-use technologies and has industrial security clearance, allowing it to handle classified information up to the PL/EU/NATO SECRET level.

According to industry information, Enamor International cooperates with the Polish Ministry of National Defence, NATO, and critical infrastructure organizations. Its projects include cybersecurity, communication systems, electronics, software, and solutions for field and maritime environments.

The president of Enamor International is Maciej Kaczkowski, who has emphasized the importance of international cooperation in delivering modern technological solutions for Poland’s defence sector.

Prime Minister Carney announced the contract during the G7 Leaders’ Summit in Évian-les-Bains, France. He described it as the first concrete example of cooperation under the SAFE agreement and said that more projects may follow in the future.

Deliveries are expected to begin this year and continue until 2030. Canada is currently the only non-European country formally included in the SAFE programme.

For Canada, the contract gives Canadian companies a stronger role in European security projects. For Poland, it is another example of technological and military cooperation with Canada’s defence industry.