Company: NKLR
Filing Date: 2025-12-16
Form Type: 424B3
Source: 0001213900-25-121900
Chunk: 40

Company: Terra Innovatum Global N.V.
Filing Date: 2025-12-16
Form: 424B3
Chunk 40
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 expensive and time consuming, and the outcome
is unpredictable. Courts outside the United States are sometimes less willing to protect trade secrets. Additionally, despite our
efforts to protect our proprietary technology, our trade secrets could otherwise become known or be independently discovered by our competitors.
If any of our trade secrets were to be lawfully obtained or independently developed by a competitor or other third party, we would have
no right to prevent them, or those to whom they communicate, from using that technology or information to compete with us.

The patent position
of our nuclear power reactors is not a guarantee of protection or rights. During the patent prosecution process, a patent office may
require us or our licensors to narrow the scope of the claims of our or our licensors’ pending and future patent applications.
This may limit the scope of patent protection and our or our licensors’ ability to assert patent infringement if the patent is
subsequently issued. In some cases, a patent may not issue if we or our licensors are unable to overcome rejections from a patent office.
By pursuing patent rights by filing a patent, we or our licensors may lose trade secrets that would have otherwise been protected had
a patent not been sought and third parties may be able to exploit such published information in our patent application. Additionally,
even if we obtain a patent in one jurisdiction (e.g., the United States), we cannot guarantee that we will obtain a corresponding
patent in another jurisdiction (e.g., Italy) as patent laws differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Additionally, maintaining
and enforcing patent rights can involve complex legal and factual questions and may be subject to litigation in some cases. For example,
third parties may challenge the validity of our or our licensors’ patents based on prior art at a tribunal such as the Patent Trial
and Appeal Board at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in a federal court. Because we cannot assure that all of the potentially
relevant prior art relating to our patents and patent applications has been found, third parties may prevail in invalidating a patent
or preventing a patent application from being issued as a patent. If we or our licensors are able to maintain valid patents or prevail
in patent challenges instituted by third parties, we or our licensors may still bear the risk of third parties “designing around”
our technologies to avoid an intellectual property infringement claim.

Our patent applications
may not result in issued patents, which may have a material adverse effect on our ability to prevent others from commercially exploiting
products similar to ours. The status of patents involves