When HCI Energy began, it was built around a conviction, not a trend.
Critical communications could not depend on fragmented power systems assembled in the field. In moments of crisis, in remote environments, and in places where infrastructure was damaged or nonexistent, power needed to be integrated, rugged, and deployable anywhere.
That belief led to the invention of what became known as the Hybrid Cube, a patented hybrid power architecture designed to unify power generation, storage, and conversion into a single, transportable system. The focus was reliability, speed of deployment, and reducing complexity in environments where access was limited and timelines were compressed. Early deployments reflected that purpose.
As communications infrastructure expanded into remote corridors, coastal regions, island communities, and hard-to-reach terrain, HCI continued working alongside teams responsible for keeping networks online where failure was not an option. Sites where grid power was unavailable or unreliable. Sites where power had to work the first time, every time.
For years, the priority was clear. Deliver integrated systems that could be dropped on site, commissioned quickly, and trusted to operate under pressure.
That work still defines the foundation of the company, but the expectations placed on power systems have begun to change.
When Reliability Was No Longer the Only Question
Initially, customer conversations centered on familiar concerns: uptime, redundancy, and backup duration.
Over time, the questions became more operational.
Why did my power fail? How do I know there’s a problem before an outage? Can I reduce hands-on maintenance? What is the real cost of my power system?
These were not hardware questions. They were operational ones.
Teams were being asked to support more sites with fewer resources and less tolerance for downtime. They needed to understand how systems behaved day to day, not just during outages. They needed insight before issues became failures. 
Power alone was no longer sufficient. Power needed to become something operators could actively manage, not simply rely on in emergencies.
Critical communications could not depend on fragmented power systems assembled in the field. In moments of crisis, in remote environments, and in places where infrastructure was damaged or nonexistent, power needed to be integrated, rugged, and deployable anywhere.
Patterns That Emerged Across Deployments
As HCI Energy grew, its solutions expanded to meet a wide range of use cases. Fully integrated hybrid shelters for remote and extreme environments. Modular rack-based systems. Cabinets for edge deployments.
At first glance, these appeared to be distinct products, but across deployments, a pattern emerged.
The most valuable part of every system was not the enclosure or configuration. It was the unified way power was being delivered and managed across sources, storage, and distribution.
Operators needed to understand not just whether power was available, but how systems behaved over time. How batteries were performing. How generators were being used. Where inefficiencies and risks were emerging before they became failures. They needed to be intelligent.
That shift changed what power was expected to do.
Why the Evolution to Evoltix
The evolution from HCI Energy to Evoltix reflects what we learned by working alongside customers as their operational realities changed.
This is not a cosmetic rebrand. It is a clarification.
Evoltix represents a shift from treating power as simply a utility to treating it as an intelligent, continuously managed system. One that provides insight as well as energy. One that supports decisions, not just equipment.
Under the Evoltix name, every solution is built around the same principle: intelligence at the core, delivered in the form the site requires.
Whether replacing aging UPS systems, deploying cabinets at edge sites, or installing fully integrated hybrid shelters in remote or mission-critical environments, the goal is consistent.
Give operators control.
Give them visibility.
Give them confidence.
Power That Reflects How Networks Actually Operate
Modern networks are denser, more distributed, and more sensitive to disruption than the systems they replaced. Power demand has increased. Energy costs have skyrocketed. Grid constraints are more common. Downtime carries greater risk.
In this environment, power systems must do more than react.
- They must reduce inefficiencies, not introduce them.
- They must surface issues early, not after failure.
- They must reduce maintenance costs and manual intervention.
- They must adapt as loads, equipment, and site roles change over time.
- Reliability and resilience remain essential. But intelligence is what allows both to scale.
This is the difference between backup power and operational power infrastructure. Between responding to problems and preventing them.
Looking Ahead, Together
The evolution to Evoltix positions us to continue supporting customers as networks expand, sites become more distributed, and power constraints become a permanent part of infrastructure planning.
Our focus is on clear, modular solutions anchored by a unified power intelligence core. Solutions designed to support long-term operational efficiency, system visibility, and proactive asset management.
Evoltix exists because customers needed more from power, and because years of real-world experience showed us how to deliver it.
Power has evolved. And so have we.