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Canada says it will host new multilateral defence bank

By Thomson Reuters Apr 30, 2026 | 3:34 AM

LONDON, April 30 (Reuters) – Canada is set to host a proposed mulitlateral defence bank designed to help fund the rearmament of nations facing heightened geopolitical risks, the ​country’s finance ministry said in a statement late ‌on Wednesday.

The statement said Canada had been working in Montreal with allies to agree a founding charter for the planned Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (DSRB). The other countries were not identified.

The DSRB has been proposed by ‌former ​NATO security advisers, senior ex-military personnel and ⁠bankers. Its aim is ⁠to found a triple-A rated institution capable of raising 100 billion pounds ($135 billion) to fund defence projects, particularly in countries that may struggle to access cheaper finance.

“Participating countries unanimously ​supported that, once ratified, Canada, which hosted the negotiations, will serve as host country for the DSRB’s future headquarters,” ⁠the country’s finance ministry said.

Canadian newspaper ⁠The Globe and Mail was first to report ​Canada was set to host the bank.

Canada has been the ​project’s most high profile backer, with Prime Minister Mark ‌Carney also voicing support. However, the initiative has also faced set-backs, with both Britain and Germany distancing themselves.

Britain has separately championed its own multilateral finance initiative with the Netherlands and Finland ⁠to help drum up private finance to procure weapons, munitions and military equipment.

“These negotiations are a crucial step in taking the DSRB ⁠from idea to ‌reality and launching this new defence-focused multilateral ⁠bank. The time to act is now, ​and I ‌look forward to continuing working with our ​partners to ⁠establish and launch the DSRB,” said Canada’s Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne.

The DSRB is also working with several high profile banks to support its launch, including JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank of Canada.

($1 = 0.7415 pounds)

(Reporting by Iain Withers, Editing by Anousha Sakoui ​and Raju Gopalakrishnan)