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News Announcement Published 9 Dec 2025 Ministry of Defence ↗ View on Parliament

Defence Export Controls Agreement

UIN: HLWS1139 My hon. Friend the Minister for Defence Readiness and Industry (Luke Pollard) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement. I am pleased to set out that the UK has acceded to the Agreement on Defence Export Controls, to which France, Germany and ...

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HLWS1139

Defence Export Controls Agreement

Statement made on 9 December 2025

Statement UIN HLWS1139

Statement made by

Lord Coaker

Minister of State, Ministry of Defence

Labour

Life peer

Lords

Statement

My hon. Friend the Minister for Defence Readiness and Industry (Luke Pollard) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
I am pleased to set out that the UK has acceded to the Agreement on Defence Export Controls, to which France, Germany and Spain are existing Parties. This represents another step forward in our support for the vital role played by UK’s defence industry in UK Growth, Defence and wider European security.
The UK’s accession to the Agreement will reduce the administrative burden of granting export licences between our nations, open opportunities for UK businesses and help boost economic growth across the country. UK sovereignty and robust export controls on defence equipment exports will be maintained under the agreement. The Agreement does not affect the UK’s export control regime or its obligations under international law, including the Arms Trade Treaty, on the conditions for exporting of military equipment. The UK’s licensing authority will therefore continue to assess each licence application against the
Strategic Export Licensing Criteria
. Accession to the Agreement will not change this approach.
The Agreement establishes a framework between the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Spain to facilitate the licensing of defence exports within collaborative industrial programs. It creates an expectation that signatories consider joint exports favourably and aims to reduce the likelihood of signatories objecting to the export of Joint Government Projects and Industrial Joint Ventures, subject to compliance with existing national and international legal obligations. This will mean more certainty for UK firms involved in multinational defence programs and supply chains, while preserving UK sovereignty.
The
Strategic Defence Review
(SDR) and
Defence Industrial Strategy
includes an aspiration to see the UK becoming Europe’s leading defence exporter. UK accession to the agreement aligns with this intent and supports government work to facilitate UK defence industry’s role as an engine for skilled UK jobs and growth. The SDR also recognises that support for secure, interoperable and agile defence supply chains is central to sustaining the UK’s industrial capability and resilience, including through international partnerships. This agreement underlines the Government’s commitment to supporting industry through exports and comes on the back of our £10 billion frigate agreement with Norway and £8 billion Typhoon deal with Turkiye.
The UK is committed to reinforcing its leading role in NATO and Euro-Atlantic security in an increasingly volatile world. Strengthening our defence and industrial partnerships with European allies is central to the endeavour. By joining the Agreement, the UK reinforces its commitment to responsible defence trade and strengthens cooperation with NATO and European allies on shared security priorities, making a positive contribution to UK national security and NATO, whilst maintaining robust standards under the UK’s strategic export-control framework.

Statement from

Ministry of Defence