UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    FORM 10-Q

(Mark One)

[X]                  QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13
                 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

                For the quarterly period ended February 29, 2012

                                       OR

[ ]                 TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13
                 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

           For the transition period from __________ to ______________

                        Commission File Number 333-133347

                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          ----------------------------
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)


            Nevada                                      98-0479983
-------------------------------                ------------------------------
State or other jurisdiction of                       (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization                       Identification No.)

    601 Union Street, Two Union Square, 42nd Floor, Seattle, Washington 98101
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
               (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)

       Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (206) 388-5498

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) filed all reports  required to
be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 during
the past 12 months (or for such shorter  period that the registrant was required
to file such reports),  and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for
the past 90 days.

Yes [X]    No  [_]

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted  electronically  and
posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every  Interactive  Data File required
to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (ss.232.405 of
this chapter)  during the  preceding 12 months (or for such shorter  period that
the registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes         No

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large  accelerated  filer, an
accelerated filer, a non-accelerated  filer, or a smaller reporting company. See
definition  of "large  accelerated  filer,"  "accelerated  filer"  and  "smaller
reporting company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

Larger accelerated filer [_]                               Accelerated filer [_]
Non-accelerated filer [_]                          Smaller reporting company [X]

Indicate by check mark whether registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule
12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
Yes [_]    No [X]


                                       1


Number of shares  issued and  outstanding  of the  registrant's  class of common
stock as of April 11, 2012: 141,043,000 shares of common stock

The Company recognized $nil revenues during the quarter ended February 29, 2012.

















                                       2




PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1.  Financial Statements (Unaudited)                               Page
                                                                        ----
         Interim Balance Sheets                                          F-6

         Interim Statements of Loss and Comprehensive Loss               F-7

         Interim Statements of Cash Flows                                F-8

         Interim Statement of Changes in Stockholders' Deficiency        F-9

         Notes to Interim Financial Statements                      F-10 to F-14

Item 2.  Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan of Operations      15

Item 3.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure about Market Risk       20

Item 4.  Controls and Procedures                                         20


PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1.  Legal Proceedings                                               21

Item 1A. Risk Factors - Not Applicable

Item 2.  Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds     21

Item 3.  Defaults upon Senior Securities - Not Applicable                21

Item 4.  Mine Safety Disclosures - Not Applicable                        21

Item 5.  Other Information                                               21

Item 6.  Exhibits                                                        21

SIGNATURES                                                               22



                                       3







                         PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION


ITEM 1.  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS




                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

                          (A Development Stage Company)




                          INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           (Expressed in U.S. Dollars)
                                   (Unaudited)
                                FEBRUARY 29, 2012


Financial Statements
                                                                     Page

    Interim Balance Sheets                                           F-6

    Interim Statements of Loss and Comprehensive Loss                F-7

    Interim Statements of Cash Flows                                 F-8

    Interim Statement of Changes in Stockholders' Deficiency         F-9

    Notes to Interim Financial Statements                         F-10 to F-14











                                       F-4









                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)


                          Interim Financial Statements
                           (Expressed in U.S. Dollars)
                                   (Unaudited)
                                February 29, 2012











                                       F-5






                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)

                             INTERIM BALANCE SHEETS
                             ----------------------


                                                                             February 29,        November 30,
                                                                                 2012                2011
                                                                             (Unaudited)          (Audited)
ASSETS
------
                                                                                      

Current Assets
   Cash and cash equivalents                                             $       6,444      $          1656
   Prepaid expenses                                                                178                  127
                                                                        --------------------------------------

   Total Current Assets                                                          6,622                1,783

Intangible assets and intellectual property (Note 6)                            45,000               75,000
                                                                        --------------------------------------

TOTAL ASSETS                                                             $      51,622      $        76,783
------------
                                                                        =========================================

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY
------------------------------------------

LIABILITIES
-----------

Current Liabilities
    Accounts payable and accrued liabilities (Note 3)                    $     266,664      $       138,910
   Note payable (Note 4)                                                        62,436               60,213
                                                                        --------------------------------------

   Total Current Liabilities                                                   329,100              199,123
                                                                        --------------------------------------

STOCKHOLDERS' (DEFICIENCY)
-------------------------

Capital Stock (Note 7)
    Authorized:
        675,000,000 common shares, par value $0.001 per share
    Common shares issued and outstanding:
        141,043,000 and 171,023,000 at February 29, 2012 and November
        30, 2011, respectively                                                 141,043              171,023
    Additional paid-in capital                                                  70,245               50,265
    Accumulated other comprehensive income                                           -                  694
Accumulated deficit                                                           (105,837)            (105,837)
Accumulated deficit during development stage                                  (382,929)            (238,485)
                                                                        --------------------------------------

   Total Stockholders' Deficiency                                             (277,478)            (122,340)
                                                                        --------------------------------------

TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY                           $      51,622       $       76,783
------------------------------------------------
                                                                        =========================================


                The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

                                               F-6





                                   PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                                  (A Development Stage Company)

                        INTERIM STATEMENTS OF LOSS AND COMPREHENSIVE LOSS
                        -------------------------------------------------
                                           (Unaudited)

                                                 For the            For the             Cumulative Amounts
                                               three-month        three-month          from re-entering of
                                              period ended       period ended           development stage
                                              February 29,       February 28,          on June 26, 2010 to
                                                  2012               2011               February 29, 2012

                                              --------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           

Expenses
   Consulting                                 $     120,000   $              -      $               225,975
   Office and administration                            947                394                        7,396
   Professional fees                                 21,989              8,991                       88,803
   Supplies and materials                                 -                  -                       59,130
                                              --------------------------------------------------------------

                                                    142,936              9,385                      381,304
                                              --------------------------------------------------------------

Net Loss before Other Item                        (142,936)            (9,385)                    (381,304)
                                              --------------------------------------------------------------

Other Item
   Foreign exchange gain (loss)                       (837)                333                        (837)
   Interest expense (Note 4)                          (671)                  -                        (788)
                                              --------------------------------------------------------------

Net Loss For The Period                           (144,444)            (9,052)                    (382,929)
                                              ==============================================================

Other Comprehensive Loss
   Foreign currency translation
   adjustment                                         (694)              (333)                        (333)
                                              --------------------------------------------------------------

Comprehensive Loss For the Period              $  (145,138)   $        (9,385)      $             (383,262)
                                              ==============================================================

Loss per share from continuing
operations - Basic and diluted                 $     (0.00)   $         (0.00)

Loss per share from discontinued
operations - Basic and diluted                 $     (0.00)   $         (0.00)
                                              ====================================

Weighted Average Number of Shares
Outstanding                                     147,956,517         96,000,000
                                              ====================================


                The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

                                               F-7






                                   PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                                  (A Development Stage Company)

                                INTERIM STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                           (Unaudited)

                                                                  For the                 Cumulative from
                                              For the           three-month               re-entering of
                                            three-month         period ended           development stage on
                                           period ended         February 28,             June 26, 2010 to
                                         February 29, 2012          2011                 February 29, 2012

                                                                           
Cash Flows used in Operating
     Net loss                         $          (144,444)  $         (9,052)       $              (382,929)

Adjustments for non-cash items:
     Accrued interest                                  671                  -                            788
     Foreign exchange loss                           1,552                  -                          1,552
Changes in operating assets and liabilities
     Prepaid expenses                                 (51)                  -                          2,532
     Accounts payable and accrued
     liabilities                                   127,754              5,334                        265,914
                                      -----------------------------------------------------------------------
     Net Cash Used in Operating
     Activities                                   (14,518)            (3,718)                      (112,143)
                                      =======================================================================

Cash Flows From Financing Activities
    Issuance of common shares                       20,000                  -                         43,000
    Increase in note payable                             -                  -                         44,096
    Contribution by related party                        -                  -                         27,288
                                      -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Net Cash Provided by Financing
    Activities                                      20,000                  -                        114,384
                                      =======================================================================

Decrease in Cash during the Period                   5,482            (3,718)                          2,241
Effect of Exchange Rate Changes on
Cash                                                 (694)              (333)                          (333)

Cash, Beginning of Period                            1,656              6,090                          4,536
                                      -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash, End of Period                   $              6,444  $           2,039       $                  6,444
                                      =======================================================================

Supplemental Disclosure of Cash
Flow Information
     Cash paid for:
         Interest                     $                  -  $               -       $                      -
         Income taxes                 $                  -  $               -       $                      -




        The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

                                       F-8






                                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                                          (A Development Stage Company)

                             INTERIM STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIENCY)
                             ------------------------------------------------------
                         For the Period from November 30, 2009 through February 29, 2012
                                                   (Unaudited)

                                             CAPITAL STOCK                              ACCUMULATED
                               -------------------------------------------
                                                              ADDITIONAL               DEFICIT DURING     ACCUMULATED
                                                                PAID-IN   ACCUMULATED   DEVELOPMENT      COMPREHENSIVE
                                    SHARES         AMOUNT       CAPITAL     DEFICIT        STAGE         INCOME (LOSS)        TOTAL
                               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                   

Balance, November 30, 2009        96,000,000  $     96,000   $          -  $ (104,786)  $         -     $      312      $    (8,474)
Common shares issued - cash
($0.004 per share)(Note 7)      120,000,000)       120,000              -    (104,000)            -              -            16,000
Common shares cancelled        (120,000,000)     (120,000)                     104,000                                      (16,000)
Contribution by related party
(Note 5)                                   -             -         13,000           -             -              -            13,000
Foreign currency translation
adjustment                                 -             -              -           -             -             21                21
Net loss for the period                    -             -              -      (1,051)      (26,339)             -          (27,390)
                               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance, November 30, 2010        96,000,000        96,000         13,000    (105,837)      (26,339)           333          (22,843)
                               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Common shares issued for
property (Note 6 and 7)           75,000,000        75,000              -           -             -              -            75,000
Common shares issued for
cash (Note 7)                         23,000            23         22,977           -             -              -            23,000
Contribution by related party
(Note 5)                                   -             -         14,288           -             -              -            14,288
Foreign currency translation
adjustment                                 -             -              -           -             -             361              361
Net loss for the period                    -             -              -           -      (212,146)             -         (212,146)
                               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance November 30, 2011        171,023,000       171,023         50,265    (105,837)     (238,485)            694        (122,340)
                               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Common shares cancelled for
property (Note 6 and 7)         (30,000,000)      (30,000)              -           -             -              -          (30,000)
Common shares issued for cash
(Note 7)                              20,000            20         19,980           -             -              -            20,000
Foreign currency translation
adjustment                                 -             -              -           -             -           (694)            (694)
Net loss for the period                    -             -              -           -      (144,444)             -         (144,444)
                               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance, February 29, 2012       141,043,000   $   141,043  $      70,245 $  (105,837) $   (382,929)     $       -     $   (277,478)
====================================================================================================================================

                        The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.

                                                       F-9





                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          (A Development stage Company)
                      NOTES TO INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                February 29, 2012
                                   (Unaudited)



      1. NATURE AND CONTINUANCE OF OPERATIONS

     a)   Organization

          PEPTIDE  TECHNOLOGIES,  INC. (the  "Company") was  incorporated in the
          State of Nevada,  United  States of America,  on November 18, 2005. On
          July 29, 2010, the Company's  name was changed from Online  Originals,
          Inc.  to  CREEnergy  Corporation.  Effective  October  12,  2011,  the
          Company's  name was  changed  from  CREEnergy  Corporation  to Peptide
          Technologies, Inc. The Company's yearend is November 30.

     b)   Nature of Operations and Change in Business

          Since the date of  inception  on  November  18,  2005,  the  Company's
          business   plan  was  to  develop  a   membership-based   website  art
          gallery/auction  house specifically  focused on displaying and selling
          original artwork.

          The Company changed its status from a development  stage company to an
          operating company on November 30, 2009.  Management  realized that the
          results  of  operations  from the sale of  artwork  lacks  luster  and
          decided  to change  the  Company's  business  focus and plan for other
          strategic  opportunities  and  discontinued  the sale of artwork  with
          effect from June 25, 2010. Effective June 26, 2010, the Company became
	  a development stage company focusing on new business.

     c)   Unaudited Statements

          While the information  presented in the accompanying interim financial
          statements is unaudited, it includes all adjustments which are, in the
          opinion  of  management,  necessary  to present  fairly the  financial
          position, results of operations and cash flows for the interim periods
          presented.   Except  as  disclosed  below,   these  interim  financial
          statements  follow the same  accounting  policies and methods of their
          application  as  the  Company's   audited  November  30,  2011  annual
          financial  statements.  It is suggested  that these interim  financial
          statements be read in conjunction with the Company's audited financial
          statements  for the year ended  November  30,  2011,  included  in the
          annual  report  previously  filed  with the  Securities  and  Exchange
          Commission  on Form 10-K.  The results of  operations  for the interim
          periods presented are not necessarily  indicative of the results to be
          expected for the full year.

          The  information  as of  November  30,  2011 is taken from the audited
          financial statements as of that date.

     d)   Basis of Presentation

          The accompanying  interim  financial  statements have been prepared in
          conformity with generally accepted accounting principles in the United
          States of America,  which contemplates the continuation of the Company
          as a going concern.  However, the Company has negative working capital
          at February 29, 2012 and has losses to date of approximately $489,000.
          These matters raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as
          a going concern.  In view of these matters,  realization of certain of
          the assets in the accompanying interim balance sheet is dependent upon
          its  ability  to meet its  financing  requirements,  raise  additional
          capital,  and  the  success  of its  future  operations.  There  is no
          assurance  that future  capital  raising  plans will be  successful in
          obtaining  sufficient  funds to  assure  its  eventual  profitability.
          Management is actively  seeking to add new products and/or services in
          order to show  profitability.  To date, due to the continued  economic


                                      F-10


                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          (A Development stage Company)
                      NOTES TO INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                February 29, 2012
                                   (Unaudited)

          conditions,  they have not yet been able to find products and services
          that would  contribute  to their  business.  We believe  that  actions
          planned  and  presently  being  taken  to  revise  its  operating  and
          financial requirements will provide the opportunity for the Company to
          continue as a going concern.  The interim financial  statements do not
          include any adjustments that might result from these uncertainties.

2.       RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

          In December 2011, the Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board ("FASB")
          issued Accounting Standards Update ("ASU") No. 2011-12, "Comprehensive
          Income".  This update  amends  certain  pending  paragraphs in ASU No.
          2011-05  "Presentation of Comprehensive  Income", to effectively defer
          only those changes that relate to the presentation of reclassification
          adjustments out of accumulated other  comprehensive  income for annual
          and interim financial  statements for public,  private, and non-profit
          entities.

          In September  2011,  the FASB issued ASU No.  2011-08,  "Intangibles -
          Goodwill and Other" which allows an entity to first assess qualitative
          factors to  determine  whether it is necessary to perform the two-step
          quantitative  goodwill  impairment  test. Under these  amendments,  an
          entity  would  not be  required  to  calculate  the  fair  value  of a
          reporting  unit unless the entity  determines,  based on a qualitative
          assessment,  that it is more  likely  than not that its fair  value is
          less than its carrying  amount.  ASU No. 2011-08 will be effective for
          the Company in fiscal 2013, with early adoption permitted. The Company
          does not  expect  the  adoption  of this  update  will have a material
          effect on its financial statements.

          In June  2011,  the FASB  issued  ASU No.  2011-05,  "Presentation  of
          Comprehensive  Income". This update presents an entity with the option
          to present the total of  comprehensive  income,  the components of net
          income, and the components of other  comprehensive  income either in a
          single continuous statement of comprehensive income or in two separate
          but consecutive statements.  In both choices, an entity is required to
          present each component of net income along with total net income, each
          component of other  comprehensive  income along with a total for other
          comprehensive  income,  and a total amount for  comprehensive  income.
          This update  eliminates  the option to present the components of other
          comprehensive   income  as  part  of  the   statement  of  changes  in
          stockholders'  equity. The amendments in this update do not change the
          items that must be reported in other  comprehensive  income or when an
          item of other comprehensive income must be reclassified to net income.
          As ASU No. 2011-05 relates only to the  presentation of  Comprehensive
          Income,  the Company  does not expect that the adoption of this update
          will have a material effect on its financial statements.

          In May 2011, the FASB issued ASU No. 2011-04, "Fair Value Measurement"
          to amend the  accounting  and  disclosure  requirements  on fair value
          measurements.  This ASU  limits  the  highest-and-best-use  measure to
          nonfinancial assets,  permits certain financial assets and liabilities
          with offsetting positions in market or counterparty credit risks to be
          measured at a net basis, and provides guidance on the applicability of
          premiums  and  discounts.   Additionally,   this  update  expands  the
          disclosure on Level 3 inputs by requiring  quantitative  disclosure of
          the unobservable inputs and assumptions, as well as description of the
          valuation  processes and the  sensitivity of the fair value to changes
          in unobservable inputs. ASU No. 2011-04 is to be applied prospectively
          and is effective  during  interim and annual periods  beginning  after
          December  15,  2011.  The Company does not expect the adoption of this
          update will have a material effect on its financial statements.

          In  January  2010,  the  FASB  issued  ASU  No.  2010-06,   "Improving
          Disclosures  about  Fair Value  Measurements".  This  update  requires
          additional  disclosure  within the roll forward of activity for assets
          and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis, including
          transfers of assets and liabilities between Level 1 and Level 2 of the
          fair value  hierarchy  and the  separate  presentation  of  purchases,
          sales,  issuances and  settlements  of assets and  liabilities  within
          Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. In addition, the update requires


                                      F-11


                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          (A Development stage Company)
                      NOTES TO INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                February 29, 2012
                                   (Unaudited)

          enhanced  disclosures  of the valuation  techniques and inputs used in
          the fair value measurements  within Levels 2 and 3. The new disclosure
          requirements  are effective for interim and annual  periods  beginning
          December  15, 2009,  except for the  disclosure  of  purchases, sales,
	  issuances and settlements of Level 3  measurements.  Those disclosures
          are effective for fiscal years beginning  after December 15, 2011. The
	  Company does  not expect  that the adoption of this update will have a
	  material effect on its financial statements.

3.       ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND ACCRUED LIABILITIES

          Accounts  payable and accrued  liabilities are  non-interest  bearing,
          unsecured and have settlement dates within one year.

4.       NOTE PAYABLE




                                                                                February 29,           November 30,
                                                                                    2012                   2011
                                                                                                        (Audited)
                                                                                               

       During the year ended November 30, 2010, Fotoview Inc.
       ("Fotoview") issued a loan of $16,000 to a former director of
       the Company to purchase 120,000,000 restricted common
       shares of the Company. Upon the director's resignation, the
       120,000,00 common shares were cancelled and the Company
       assumed the loan payable to Fotoview. The loan is unsecured,
       bears no interest, and has no fixed terms of repayment.                  $        16,000      $         16,000

       On September 21, 2011, PSI Services ("PSI") issued a loan of $500
       to the Company. The loan is unsecured, bears no interest,
       and has no fixed terms of repayment.                                                 500                   500

       On November 13, 2011, PSI Services ("PSI") issued a loan of $43,596
       to the Company. The loan is unsecured and bears interest at a rate
       of 6% per annum. The loan payable to PSI as at February 29, 2012
       consists of principal of $45,148 (CAD $45,000) (November 30, 2011
       - $43,596 CAD $45,000)) and accrued interest of $788 (November 30,
       2011 - $117).                						         45,936                43,713
                                                                                ----------------     -----------------

                                                                                $        62,436      $         60,213
                                                                                ----------------     -----------------


5.       RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

         During the three month period  ended  February 29, 2012, a director and
         shareholder of the Company made cash contribution in the amount of $Nil
         (February 28, 2011 - $Nil, Cumulative - $27,288).

6.       INTANGIBLE ASSETS AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

          On August 23, 2011, the Company  entered into an agreement (the "Asset
          Purchase  Agreement") with unrelated parties that subsequently  became
          directors of the Company to acquire intangible assets and intellectual
          property known as the Peptide  Technology  Platforms (the "Platforms")
          in exchange for  75,000,000  common  shares of the Company  (issued on
          August 23, 2011).

          On December 21, 2011,  the Company  entered into an amended  agreement
          amending the Asset  Purchase  Agreement was dated August 23, 2011 (the
          "Amended  Asset  Purchase  Agreement")  and,  as a result,  a total of
          30,000,000 common shares were returned to treasury and cancelled (Note
          7) in  exchange  for  payment of half of the one  percent of all gross
          monies  received by the Company from revenue  produced  from  products
          derived from the use of all the formulae listed in the Assets Purchase
          Agreement.  In addition, a monthly stipend of CAD $15,000 per month is
          to be paid  commencing  from receipt of monies from the first contract
          signed to purchase products derived from the use of the formulae for a
          period  of five  years  from the date of the  Amended  Asset  Purchase
          Agreement.

         The Platforms includes but are not limited to the following:

          i.   Proteomic  research  platforms  which include  proprietary  solid
               phase media side-chain protected peptide array synthesis;

                                      F-12


                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          (A Development stage Company)
                      NOTES TO INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                February 29, 2012
                                   (Unaudited)

          ii.  Peptide libraries;
          iii. Combination design techniques;
          iv.  Peptide molecule modifications;
          v.   A  proprietary   genetic  algorithm  that  designs  peptides  for
               goodness to fit to a target; and
          vi.  Proprietary and patented application platforms, including a viral
               vector   gene   therapy   and   epitode-mapping   based   vaccine
               development.


7.       CAPITAL STOCK

         Authorized
         The Company's authorized common stock consists of 675,000,000 shares of
         common stock with a par value of $0.001 per share.  On August 10, 2010,
         the Company  increased  the number of  authorized  share  capital  from
         75,000,000 shares of common stock to 675,000,000 shares of common stock
         with the same par value of $0.001 per share.

         Issued and outstanding
         On June 2, 2010,  and effective  August 10, 2010,  the directors of the
         Company  approved a forward split of the common stock of the Company on
         a basis of 30 new common shares for 1 old common share.  As a result of
         the forward  stock split,  208,800,000  additional  shares were issued.
         Capital and additional paid-in capital have been adjusted  accordingly.
         When  adjusted  retroactively,   there  was  an  $119,501  shortage  of
         additional paid-in capital;  thus an adjustment to accumulated  deficit
         of  $104,000  was  recorded  on May 21,  2010 (the date of  issuance of
         120,000,000  shares) and $15,501 to the beginning balance.  The interim
         financial  statements  contained herein reflect the appropriate  values
         for capital stock and accumulated deficit.  Unless otherwise noted, all
         references  in the  accompanying  interim  financial  statements to the
         number of common shares and per share  amounts have been  retroactively
         restated to reflect the forward stock split.

         The total issued and  outstanding  capital stock is 141,043,000  common
         shares  with a par value of $0.001  per  common  share.  The  Company's
         common stock issuances to date are as follows:

          a)   On November 18, 2005,  54,000,000  shares of the Company's common
               stock were issued to a former director and officer of the Company
               for cash proceeds of $18,000.

          b)   On November 28, 2005,  21,000,000  shares of the Company's common
               stock were issued to a former director and officer of the company
               for cash proceeds of $7,000.

          c)   On July 21,  2006,  the Company  completed a public  offering and
               issued  21,000,000  shares of the Company's common stock for cash
               totalling $70,000. The Company incurred offering costs of $14,501
               related to this offering, resulting in net proceeds of $55,499.

          d)   On May 21, 2010,  120,000,000 shares of the Company's  restricted
               common stock, valued at $16,000, were issued to a former director
               and officer of the Company.  On October 29, 2010, the 120,000,000
               restricted  common shares of the Company  previously  issued to a
               former  director  and  officer of the  Company  were  returned to
               treasury  for no  consideration.  The shares  were  cancelled  on
               November 2, 2010.

          e)   On August 23, 2011, the Company issued  75,000,000  shares of its
               restricted  common  stock in exchange for  intangible  assets and
               intellectual   property.   On  December  21,  2011,  a  total  of
               30,000,000 common shares were returned to treasury and cancelled.
               (Note 6).

          f)   During October and November 2011,  23,000 shares of the Company's
               common stock were issued for cash proceeds of $23,000.

                                      F-13


                           PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                          (A Development stage Company)
                      NOTES TO INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                February 29, 2012
                                   (Unaudited)

          g)   During January 2012,  20,000 shares of the Company's common stock
               were issued for cash proceeds of $20,000.


8.       INCOME TAXES

         The  Company is  subject to foreign  and  domestic  income  taxes.  The
         Company has had no income, and therefore has paid no income tax.

         Deferred  income taxes arise from temporary  timing  differences in the
         recognition  of income and expenses  for  financial  reporting  and tax
         purposes.  The Company's  deferred tax assets  consist  entirely of the
         benefit from net  operating  loss ("NOL") carry-forwards. The NOL carry
         forwards  expire in various years through 2032. The Company's  deferred
         tax assets are offset by a valuation  allowance due to the  uncertainty
         of the realization of the NOL carry-forwards. NOL carry-forwards may be
         further limited by a change in company  ownership and other  provisions
         of the tax laws.

The Company's deferred tax assets,  valuation allowance, and change in valuation
allowance are as follows:




       Period Ending      Estimated               Estimated                  Change in  Effect of
                             NOL        NOL       Tax Benefit   Valuation    Valuation  change in   Net Tax
                        Carry-forward  Expires    from NOL      Allowance    Allowance   tax rate   Benefit
                                                                               

     November 30, 2011     328,821      2031      115,087      (115,087)       (74,251)     -          -
     February 29, 2012     473,265      2032      165,643      (165,643)       (50,556)     -          -


         Income taxes at the  statutory  rate are  reconciled  to the  Company's
actual income taxes as follows:




                                                          February 28, 2012        November 30, 2011
                                                                          

     Income tax benefit at statutory rate resulting
     from net operating loss carry forward                     (35%)                    (35%)
     Deferred income tax valuation allowance                    35%                      35%
                                                        --------------------    ----------------------
     Actual tax rate                                            0%                       0%
                                                        ====================    ======================


9.      CONTINGENCY

          On November 22,  2010,  the Company was served with a claim filed by a
          former director and officer of the Company. The claim alleges that the
          former director and officer of the Company suffered losses and damages
          as a result  of the  failure  of the  Company  in  providing  him with
          corporate  documents  and  implementing  a  change  of  the  board  of
          directors.  The  Company  has  retained  legal  counsel to address the
          claim.  On December 8, 2010,  the Company filed a Statement of Defense
          requesting that the claim be dismissed.  In the opinion of management,
          this claim is without  merit and the  Company  intends to defend  this
          claim vigorously.  As a loss is not deemed probable,  no accruals have
          been made as of February 29, 2012.


10.      SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

         There are no  reportable  events during the period from the three month
         period  ended  February  29,  2012 to the  date the  interim  financial
         statements are available to be issued on April 11, 2012.




                                      F-14



Item 2.           MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OR PLAN OF OPERATIONS

The  following  discussion  should  be read in  conjunction  with our  unaudited
financial  statements and notes thereto included herein. In connection with, and
because we desire to take  advantage  of, the "safe  harbor"  provisions  of the
Private  Securities  Litigation Reform Act of 1995, we caution readers regarding
certain forward looking statements in the following  discussion and elsewhere in
this report and in any other statement made by, or on our behalf, whether or not
in future filings with the Securities and Exchange  Commission.  Forward-looking
statements are statements not based on historical  information  and which relate
to future  operations,  strategies,  financial results,  or other  developments.
Forward-looking  statements are necessarily based upon estimates and assumptions
that are inherently subject to significant business,  economic, and competitive,
uncertainties and  contingencies,  many of which are beyond our control and many
of which,  with  respect to future  business  decisions,  are subject to change.
These  uncertainties and contingencies can affect actual results and could cause
actual results to differ materially from those expressed in any  forward-looking
statements  made by or on our  behalf.  We  disclaim  any  obligation  to update
forward-looking statements.

The following discussion of the plan of operation,  financial condition, results
of  operations,  cash flows and  changes in  financial  position  of our Company
should be read in  conjunction  with our most recent  financial  statements  and
notes appearing  elsewhere in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, and our Annual
Report on Form 10-K filed on February 28, 2012.

The independent  registered  public  accounting  firms' reports on the Company's
financial  statements as of November 30, 2011,  and for each of the years in the
two-year period then ended; include a "going concern" explanatory paragraph that
describes  substantial  doubt about the Company's ability to continue as a going
concern.  Management's  plans in regard to the factors prompting the explanatory
paragraph  are  discussed  below and also in Note 1 to the  unaudited  quarterly
financial statements.


Discontinued Operations and New Developments

Since inception,  the Company's  business plan was to develop a membership based
website art gallery/auction house specifically focused on displaying and selling
original  artwork.  The  Company  changed its status  from a  development  stage
company to an operating company on November 30, 2009.  Management  realized that
the results of operations from the sale of artwork was  lack-luster,  and it was
decided  to change the  Company's  business  focus and plan for other  strategic
opportunities  and  discontinued  the sale of artwork to be  effective  June 25,
2010.  Effective June 26, 2010,  the Company  started to focus on a new business
development. On July 29, 2010, the Company's name changed from Online Originals,
Inc. to CREEnergy Corporation. The name change was intended to convey a sense of
the  Company's  new business  focus as it looked to pursue other  opportunities.
Specifically,  the Company  intended to obtain  leases for the  exploration  and
production  of oil and gas in  northern  Canada  and the  United  States.  These
objectives  have not been  realized and the Company has abandoned its efforts in
this area.

On August 23,  2011,  the Company  entered into an Asset  Purchase  Agreement in
which the Company, in exchange for 75,000,000 shares of the Company's restricted
common stock, will receive all rights and title to proprietary  technologies and
formulas involving the application of specialty  peptides.  On December 21, 2011
the Asset Purchase Agreement was amended and 30,000,000 of the 75,000,000 shares
issued were returned to treasury.  Having done this, the Company has changed its
business focus from obtaining  leases for the  exploration and production of oil
and  gas  in  areas  of  northern  Alberta,  Canada,  to the  manufacturing  and
distribution of natural  peptide  solutions to combat the economic burden caused
by the zebra and quagga mussels to the hydropower electricity industry.

Principal Products and Services
-------------------------------

The Company intends to develop and provide a sustainable  natural  solution that
addresses the economic  burdens caused by the zebra and quagga mussels,  without
harming other organisms or depleting a segment of the natural food chain.

Business of Issuer

Peptide Technologies, Inc. is a development stage company that is engaged in the
development and manufacture of environmentally safe peptide-based  products used
to combat the rapidly  growing  problems  caused by the quagga and zebra  mussel
infestation  in  U.S.  and  Canadian  waters.  The  Company  specializes  in the
development of peptide formulas which may be added to a specific coating product
and applied to  substrates,  creating a surface  which is  uninhabitable  by the
quagga and zebra mussels.  The  advantages of our peptide  formulas are (1) they
are 100% safe to  humans;  (2) they will not kill the  mussels  which are now an
integral  part  of  the  food  chain,  the  disruption  of  which  would  be  an
environmental  unknown;  and  (3)  they  are  organic  and   eco-environmentally
friendly.


                                       15



Background
The zebra  mussel  (Dreissena  polymorpha)  and its  cousin,  the quagga  mussel
(Dreissena rostriformis bugensis),  are small bivalve mollusks with two matching
half  shells,  having an average  life span of 3 to 5 years.  Zebra  mussels are
native to the Black,  Caspian,  and Azov Seas,  dating back to 1769. By the late
18th and  early  19th  centuries,  zebra  mussels  had  spread to most all major
drainages of Europe because of widespread  construction  of canal systems.  They
first  appeared in Great Britain in 1824,  where they are now well  established.
Since then,  zebra  mussels  have  expanded  their range into  Denmark,  Sweden,
Finland,  Ireland,  Italy,  and the rest of Western  Europe.  Zebra mussels were
first  discovered in North America in 1988 in the Great Lakes. The first account
of an  established  population  came from Canadian  waters of Lake St. Clair,  a
water body connecting Lake Huron and Lake Erie. By 1990,  zebra mussels had been
found in all the Great Lakes.  The following  year,  zebra  mussels  escaped the
Great Lakes basin and found their way into the Illinois and Hudson  rivers.  The
Illinois  River was the key to their  introduction  into the  Mississippi  River
drainage which covers over 1.2 million square miles. Since its introduction, the
zebra mussel has spread to 23 states in America and two Canadian provinces.

The quagga mussel is  indigenous  to the Dneiper  River  drainage of Ukraine and
Ponto-Caspian  Sea. It was discovered in the Bug River in 1890 by Andrusov,  who
named the  species  in 1897.  The quagga  mussel was first  sighted in the Great
Lakes in  September  1989,  when one was found  near Port  Colborne,  Lake Erie,
though the  recognition  of the quagga type as a distinct  species was not until
1991.  In August 1991, a mussel with a different  genotype was found in a random
zebra  mussel  sample  from the Erie Canal  near  Palmyra,  New York,  and after
confirmation that this mussel was not a variety of Dreissena polymorpha, the new
species  was named  "quagga  mussel"  after the  "quagga",  an  extinct  African
relative of the zebra.  The first sighting of quagga  mussels  outside the Great
Lakes basin was made in the  Mississippi  River between St. Louis,  Missouri and
Alton,  Illinois in 1995. In January 2007,  populations  of quagga  mussels were
discovered in Lake Mead near Boulder City,  Nevada,  and in Lake Havasu and Lake
Mohave on the California/Arizona border.

The quagga mussel is a prolific breeder, possibly contributing to its spread and
abundance.  Dreissena  are  dioecious  (either  male or  female)  with  external
fertilization.  A fully mature  female  mussel is capable of producing up to one
million eggs per year.  After  fertilization,  pelagic  microscopic  larvae,  or
veligers,  develop  within a few days and these  veligers  soon  acquire  minute
bivalve shells. Free-swimming veligers drift with the currents for three to four
weeks feeding by their hair-like cilia while trying to locate suitable substrata
to settle and secure byssal threads. Zebra and quagga mussels accumulate organic
pollutants  within their  tissues to levels more than 300,000 times greater than
concentrations  in the  environment  and  these  pollutants  are  found in their
pseudofeces,  which  can be  passed  up the  food  chain,  therefore  increasing
wildlife  exposure to organic  pollutants  (Snyder et al., 1997).  Another major
threat  involves the fouling of native  freshwater  mussels.  Since quaggas were
discovered  in Lake  Michigan in 1998,  plankton  rings formed by the passage of
storms  have  been  eaten  away by the  quagga  mussels,  threatening  the local
ecosystem.

Numerous pipelines, filter screens, hydroelectric turbines and pumping stations,
irrigation  tunnels,  canals and aqueducts are becoming  clogged with quagga and
zebra  mussels,  and this  proliferation  and  dispersion of mussel  populations
threatens  to impact  reclamation  operations  and  multiple  dams across  North
America,  resulting in the  interruption  of  hydropower  and water  delivery at
significant economic costs. Of particular concern is the blockage of water lines
designed to cool the hydropower turbines at dams like Hoover.

The quagga  mussels,  which grow to about 1.5 inches,  are clogging  water lines
that are used to cool the 17 massive hydropower  turbines at Hoover Dam and have
already  forced dam  operators to  temporarily  shut down  turbines  that supply
electricity to 1.6 million people in southern Nevada, Arizona and California.

The mussels have caused  similar  problems at the  downstream  Davis Dam in Lake
Mohave and Parker Dam in Lake  Havasu,  both of which  provide  electricity  for
thousands of people in Arizona and California.  The mussels have also threatened
to clog water  intake lines in Lake Mead  operated by the Southern  Nevada Water
System that supply water to more than 2 million people in the Las Vegas area.

What took  decades  to unfold in the Great  Lakes has  played out in a matter of
months  in Lake  Mead.  Quaggas  can lay eggs  six or seven  times a year in the
warmer water, compared with once or twice a year in the Great Lakes.

If you drained Lake Mead above Hoover Dam, says National Park Service  biologist
Bryan Moore, it would reveal that brown canyon walls that were  mussel-free just
two years ago are now black with quaggas at densities of up to 55,000 per square
meter.  The Bureau of Reclamation,  which operates the Hoover,  Davis and Parker
dams, has employed divers with high-pressure  water hoses to blow mussels out of
pipelines and filter gates,  and the agency retains the option of using chlorine
treatments  on the mussels if necessary.  But those  treatments  are  expensive,
temporary and, in the case of chlorine, can have negative environmental effects.

			               16



Colonization of the Columbia River Basin (CRB)in the Pacific  Northwest by zebra
and quagga  mussel could  affect all  submerged  components  and conduits of the
Federal  Columbia River Power System (FCRPS)  including  trash racks,  raw water
distribution  systems  (headers),  turbine  bearing  cooling  systems,  diffuser
plates, service and fire-water systems, and fish passage facilities.

Despite  the  uncertainty  about  zebra and  quagga  mussel  tolerance  to water
velocity,  irregularities such as cracks and crevices and scaling in older pipes
and flanges can provide  lower  velocity  refugia  where zebra and quagga mussel
settlement can occur. The attached mussels, in turn, then produce additional low
flow refuges, allowing colonization in otherwise inhospitable flow environments.
Settlement can also occur when water flow is reduced during generation down-time
as conditions become more conducive to attachment.

Zebra and quagga mussel  densities within the CRB could vary widely depending on
water chemistry, food availability, and breeding population. After their initial
introduction,  zebra  mussel  populations  can  rapidly  increase  by  orders of
magnitude, and then similarly decrease. Under ideal conditions in the Laurentian
Great Lakes zebra  mussel  densities  reach  700,000 - 800,000 per square  meter
(Kovalak et al, 1993). In the lower  Mississippi  River,  where the zebra mussel
has been  introduced,  densities of 400,000 per square meter have been  reported
(Kraft,  1995).  The Mississippi  has an ideal  environment for zebra and quagga
mussels,  in part  because food  resources  are abundant  (Kraft,  1995).  While
Columbia River water quality parameters are favorable to zebra and quagga mussel
colonization  (Athearn 1999), the Columbia  River's lower plankton  densities in
comparison to the Mississippi or Great Lakes,  may limit zebra and quagga mussel
population densities.

Densities of zebra and quagga  mussels in the Pacific  Northwest  will determine
the severity of impacts on hydropower,  navigation, and fish passage facilities.
Zebra mussel  densities in powerhouses  will depend on the  configuration of the
water systems and water conduit  materials.  The potential  economic  impacts of
zebra and quagga  mussels on  hydropower  generation  facilities in the Columbia
River will be determined by a number of factors including density,  growth rate,
and maintenance  costs.  While density and growth are affected by  environmental
factors as noted above,  maintenance costs will also be driven by the difficulty
in accessing  fouled areas, the methods  available for removal and control,  and
the amount of time available for maintenance activities. They prefer to cling to
flat,  stainless steel structures where water flows less than 6 feet per second.
The muscles  infestation sets in and begins to clog hydroelectric  power cooling
pipes and other hardware in the dams' operations with quagga colonies.  Not only
do they pose a threat to the cooling pipe system for hydroelectric turbines, but
also to the network that supplies domestic water for workers and visitors at the
dams.

Economic Impacts:
o Hydroelectric Dams and Nuclear Power Plants
There  are  more  than  85,000  dams  in  the  United  States  alone,  of  which
approximately  11% are federally  owned and  operated.  The major concern is the
blockage of water lines  designed to cool the  hydropower  turbines at dams like
Hoover. This problem has already caused a "significant increase in the frequency
of high temperature alarms in cooling systems,  requiring shutdowns" so that the
mussels could be removed.

Quagga
The quagga  mussels,  which grow to about 1.5 inches,  are clogging  water lines
that are used to cool the 17 massive hydropower  turbines at Hoover Dam and have
already  forced dam  operators to  temporarily  shut down  turbines  that supply
electricity to 1.6 million people in southern Nevada, Arizona and California.

The mussels have caused  similar  problems at the  downstream  Davis Dam in Lake
Mohave and Parker Dam in Lake  Havasu,  both of which  provide  electricity  for
thousands of people in Arizona and California.  The mussels have also threatened
to clog water  intake lines in Lake Mead  operated by the Southern  Nevada Water
System that supply water to more than 2 million people in the Las Vegas area.

Maintenance  costs will also be driven by the  difficulty  in  accessing  fouled
areas,  the methods  available  for removal and control,  and the amount of time
available for  maintenance  activities.  It has been  estimated that hundreds of
millions  of dollars is spent  annually  to combat  the  mussel  infestation  at
hydroelectric  dams  alone,  and it is expected  that this amount will  increase
exponentially once the infestation has spread to the West.

				     17



Virtually any submerged  area with a moderate flow rate that draws water from an
infested water source is vulnerable to colonization.  This is especially true of
areas that offer protection to small mussels,  such as crevices or seams. Intake
screens,  for  example,  are common  settlement  areas and are often coated with
clumps or druses of mussels.  The presence of dislodged  shells in the discharge
of a facility's  raw well or forbay is a common first  indicator of the presence
of zebra  mussels  in the raw  water  main.  Facilities  may also  experience  a
noticeable  decrease in head pressure.  Most facilities have numerous components
subject to severe biofouling,

o Shipping Industry
The shipping  industry  worldwide  spends huge amounts every year  combating the
effects of  "fouling".  Every year or two,  ocean going vessels must dry-dock in
order to undergo  extensive work over two or more weeks to remove barnacles that
have attached to the hull. Prior to dry-docking,  ships gradually  undergo rapid
increases in  additional  fuel costs due to  increased  drag from  fouling.  The
mechanism  involved  in fouling  occurs in a series of three  steps.  Within one
week, the hull surface is coated with a slimy deposit.  Following this,  various
micro-organisms  (bacteria)  attach.  Barnacles  attach to this  slimy/bacterial
coating and become attached to the ship's hull using a biocement  generated by a
series of three  proteins  that  undergo a  conformational  change,  within  the
organism.  This cement is one of, if not the  strongest  cement known to date of
anything produced naturally.

The current antifouling paint applied to ship hulls contains toxic chemicals and
heavy metals.  However, as the international shipping community has been issuing
legislation prohibiting the use of these environmentally  hazardous substances -
the need for alternatives is pressing.

o Recreational Boating Industry
In  contrast,  Lake Mead Marina  predicts  the costs to the West's  recreational
boating  industry  alone will be immense  in the coming few years.  Mussels  are
smothering everything under the waterline at marinas,  making simple maintenance
on boats  and  floating  docks  expensive  and time  consuming,  not to  mention
dangerous due to the razor-sharp shells being plucked from the water.

The United States Park Service, which figures the mussels have been in Lake Mead
since  2005,  is trying to protect  the rest of the West's  waters by  requiring
boats that have been docked in a slip to be decontaminated with jets of scalding
water before  departing Lake Mead. A killer hot wash costs about $40 for a small
boat and up to $200 for a houseboat.

o Ecological Damage
The  infestation  of zebra and quagga  mussels are wreaking  havoc on the native
species indigenous to the waterways they inhabit.  These mussels attach to other
mussel species and crustaceans  making it almost  impossible for them to eat and
survive.  While the zebra and  quagga do have  predator  enemies,  there are not
enough to consume the rapidly growing infestation.

This is more than an ecological  concern.  The federal government plans to spend
over a billion  dollars in the coming years to help these species  recover,  and
zebra and quagga mussels have a history of ravaging native species in the waters
they invade. In Lake Michigan,  for example, prey fish numbers are less than 10%
of what they were before the invasive mussels arrived.

Zebra  mussels  are also  believed  to be the  source of deadly  avian  botulism
poisoning  that has killed tens of  thousands  of birds in the Great Lakes since
the late 1990s.

Zebra and quagga mussels  accumulate  organic pollutants within their tissues to
levels more than 300,000 times greater than  concentrations  in the  environment
and these pollutants are found in their pseudofeces,  which can be passed up the
food chain, therefore increasing wildlife exposure to organic pollutants.

Another major threat involves the fouling of native  freshwater  mussels.  Since
quaggas were  discovered in Lake Michigan in 1998,  plankton rings formed by the
passage of storms have been eaten away by the quagga  mussels,  threatening  the
local ecosystem.

					18



Other zebra and quagga mussel infested  applications include:

     o    Drinking water treatment facilities
     o    Fish hatcheries and aquaculture facilities
     o    Golf courses
     o    Impoundments and reservoirs
     o    Institutions (hospitals, colleges, etc.)
     o    National scenic river ways
     o    Navigation locks
     o    Public agencies
     o    farm irrigation water


Our Advantages

We believe that our  proprietary  technology  provide  advantages over potential
competitors to meet their objectives.

Proprietary Technology:

We intend to  manufacture a product based on  proprietary  technology  that took
over ten years to develop.

Our  approach  allows us to  construct  and test a targeted  peptide in weeks as
opposed to the present vaccine  development  that can take longer than a year to
make and test. We have  reconstructed the peptides in such a way that enzymes do
not  recognize  them and  therefore  will not  destroy  them.  As a result,  our
targeted  peptides will have the  opportunity to perform the objective they were
designed to fulfill. Additionally, peptides based on structures of the naturally
occurring  barnacle  cement  proteins are non-toxic,  and once sloughed off into
seawater, peptides would be eaten as totally non-toxic food by marine organisms.

The Company has developed proprietary  innovative peptide proteomic technologies
involving  the use of  peptides  to create a  solution  that  would  effectively
prevent  zebra and quagga  muscles  from  attaching to  equipment,  water intake
pipes,  and even boat hulls to colonize  in massive  numbers.  The Company  uses
computer   algorithms  to  generate   peptides   capable  of  interacting   with
biologically   significant  protein  targets.  When  fully  developed,   Peptide
Technologies'  peptide  solution  will slow the rate of zebra and quagga  mussel
fouling as well as to eliminate  the harm to water users and marine life through
the use of safe, environmentally-friendly natural peptides. While the production
of an  underwater  adhesive  that mimics the  properties  of mussels has been an
ongoing  field of research,  Peptide  Technologies  is focused on proteins  that
comprise  the glue that  affixes  the  byssal  threads  of the zebra and  quagga
mussels to hard surfaces.

We have two designs  that we are  launching  for use by the shipping and boating
industry based upon our technology:

     o    The first was the design of specific peptide  inhibitors of a bacteria
          that attaches to a ship's hull, which could be incorporated into paint
          used to coat the hull  following  defouling in dry-dock.  The peptides
          would prevent attachment of the bacteria and subsequent  attachment of
          the barnacles. Furthermore, any release of the peptides into the ocean
          as the paint wears off, would not pose any environmental  threat since
          peptides are biodegradable natural proteins.

     o    The second  approach  was the design of peptide  inhibitors  that will
          prevent  folding  of the  proteins  in  barnacles  that  generate  the
          powerful cement that "glue" them to the ship's hull. Both of the above
          approaches  offered  the  shipping  industry a solution  to an age old
          problem  costing  literally  billions  of  dollars in lost time at sea
          (dry-dock  scraping  of  barnacles  and  painting)  and  significantly
          reduced fuel costs by preventing any increase in drag.


Material Changes in Financial Condition

At February 29, 2012, our cash balance was $6,444. In addition,  we have prepaid
expenses of $178. Cash on hand is currently our only source of liquidity.  We do
not  have  any  lending   arrangements   in  place  with  banking  or  financial
institutions  and we do not  anticipate  that we will  be able to  secure  these
funding arrangements in the near future.

At February 29, 2012, we had a working capital deficit of $322,478 compared to a
working  capital deficit of $197,340 at November 30, 2011. At February 29, 2012,
our total assets  consisted  of cash of $6,444,  prepaid  expenses of $178,  and
Intangible Asset and Intellectual  Property of $45,000. This compares with total
assets at November 30, 2011, which consisted of cash of $1,656, prepaid expenses
of $127 and Intangible Asset and Intellectual Property of $75,000.

At February 29, 2012, our total current  liabilities  increased to $329,100 from
$199,123 at November 30, 2011.  During the three months ended February 29, 2012,
accounts payable and accrued liabilities increased by $127,754.

We believe our existing cash balances will not be sufficient to carry our normal
operations over the next three (3) months.  Our short and long-term  survival is
dependent on sales of securities  as necessary or from  shareholder  loans,  and
thus, to the extent that we require  additional  funds to support our operations
or the  expansion of our  business,  we will attempt to sell  additional  equity
shares or issue debt. Any sale of additional  equity  securities  will result in
dilution to our stockholders. Continuing events in worldwide capital markets may
make it more difficult for us to raise additional  equity or capital.  There can
be no assurance that additional financing,  if required, will be available to us
or on acceptable terms.

					19



Result of Operations

For The Three Months Ended  February 29, 2012 Compared To The Three Months Ended
February 28, 2011.

We recognized nil revenues from operational sales during the three months ending
February 29, 2012.

During the three  months  ended  February  29,  2012,  operating  expenses  were
$142,936  compared to $9,385 for the three months ended  February 28, 2011.  The
increase of $133,551 was due to an increase in  consulting  fees of $120,000 and
an  increase  in  professional  fees of $12,998  due to our  pursuit of business
opportunities  related to the peptide technology.  Operating expenses during the
three months ended February 29, 2012,  consisted of consulting fees of $120,000,
professional  fees of  $21,989  and  office  and  administration  costs  of $947
compared to professional  fees of $8,991 and office and  administration  fees of
$394 incurred for the three months ended February 28, 2011.

We  recognized a net loss of $144,444  for the three  months ended  February 29,
2012,  compared to a net loss of $9,052 for the three months ended  February 28,
2011.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

We currently do not have any off-balance sheet arrangements.

Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates

The  preparation  of the  Company's  financial  statements  in  conformity  with
generally  accepted   accounting   principles  in  the  United  States  requires
management to make assumptions and estimates that affect the reported amounts of
assets,  liabilities,  revenues  and  expenses  as  well  as the  disclosure  of
contingent  assets and  liabilities at the date of the financial  statements and
the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting  period.



ITEM 3.                QUANTATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK.

As a "smaller  reporting  company" as defined by Item 10 of Regulation  S-K, the
Company is not required to provide information required by this Item.


ITEM 4.                CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

As of the end of the period covered by this report,  we conducted an evaluation,
under the  supervision  and with the  participation  of our  President and Chief
Financial  Officer,  of our  disclosure  controls and  procedures (as defined in
Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the 1934 Act). Based on this evaluation, the
President and Chief Financial Officer concluded that our disclosure controls and
procedures are effective to ensure that information  required to be disclosed by
us in reports that we file or submit under the 1934 Act is recorded,  processed,
summarized and reported within the time periods  specified in the Securities and
Exchange Commission rules and forms.

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal
control over financial  reporting for the company in accordance  with as defined
in Rules  13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)  under the Exchange Act. Our internal  control
over financial  reporting is designed to provide reasonable  assurance regarding
the  reliability  of  financial  reporting  and  the  preparation  of  financial
statements  for  external   purposes  in  accordance  with  generally   accepted
accounting principles.

Management's  assessment of the  effectiveness  of the small  business  issuer's
internal  control over  financial  reporting is as of the quarter ended February
29, 2012. We believe that our internal control over financial  reporting was not
effective due to material weaknesses in the system of internal control.

Specifically, management identified the following control deficiency:

             The Company has installed accounting software that does not prevent
             erroneous or unauthorized changes to previous reporting periods and
             does not  provide an adequate  audit  trail of entries  made in the
             accounting software.

Because of its inherent  limitations,  internal control over financial reporting
may not prevent or detect misstatements.  Also, projections of any evaluation of
effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become
inadequate  because of changes in  conditions,  or that the degree of compliance
with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

There  was no change in our  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  that
occurred  during the fiscal quarter ended February 29, 2012, that has materially
affected,  or is reasonably  likely to materially  affect,  our internal control
over financial reporting.


                                       20



                           PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1.  Legal Proceedings

On  November  22,  2010,  the  Company was served with a claim filed by a former
director  and officer of the Company.  The claim,  filed in the court of Queen's
Bench of Alberta,  Canada,  alleges that the former  director and officer of the
Company suffered losses and damages as a result of the failure of the Company in
providing him with corporate documents and implementing a change of the board of
directors.  The  Company has  retained  legal  counsel to address the claim.  On
December 8, 2010, the Company filed a Statement of Defense  requesting  that the
claim be dismissed. The Company intends to defend this claim vigorously.

Other then the above preceding,  the Company is not a party to any other pending
legal  proceedings,  nor  is  the  Company  aware  of any  civil  proceeding  or
government  authority  contemplating any legal proceeding as of the date of this
filing.

ITEM 1A.          RISK FACTORS

Not applicable.

Item 2.           UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND USE OF PROCEEDS

None.

Item 3.  DEFAULTS UPON SENIOR SECURITIES

None.

Item 4.  mine safety disclosure.

Not Applicable.

Item 5.  Other Information

None

Item 6.           Exhibits

(a) Pursuant to Item 601 of Regulation S-K, the following  exhibits are included
herein.

     Exhibit
     Number          Description

     31.1         Section 302 Certification - President
     31.2         Section 302 Certification - Chief Financial Officer.
     32.1         Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted
                  pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 --
                  President
     32.2         Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted
                  pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 --
                  Chief Financial Officer






                                       21


                                   SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the  requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities  Exchange
Act of 1934,  the  registrant  has duly  caused  this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, on this 16th day of April,
2012.


                                    PEPTIDE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.



Date: April 16, 2012                By: /s/ Deborah Fortescue-Merrin
                                        ----------------------------

                                    Name: Deborah Fortescue-Merrin
                                    Title: President



Date: April 16, 2012                By: /s/ Richard Fortescue
                                        ---------------------

                                    Name: Richard Fortescue
                                    Title: Chief Financial Officer









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