QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC
Converting Canada's quantum leadership into operational advantage
May 25, 2026
Canadian War Museum | Ottawa
Hosted by:
May 25, 2026
Canadian War Museum | Ottawa
Hosted by:
Canada has named quantum a sovereign capability. Now it’s time to operationalize it.
QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC is a one-day, executive-level forum focused on turning Canada’s quantum strengths into deployed capability. It convenes Canada’s quantum technology sector, key ecosystem partners, and defence, security, and policy leaders to work through what it will take to move from promising technologies to operational systems.
Grounded in real missions, real constraints, and real timelines, this discussion centres on how Canada executes — moving from technical promise to operational advantage.
Grounded in real missions, real constraints, and real timelines, the day will focus on:
| 08:45 | Welcome and Opening Remarks Emcee: Dr. Christian Sarra-Bournet, Executive Director, Institut Quantique de l’Université de Sherbrooke
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| 09:10 | The Quantum SITREP: Where Things Actually Stand Before the day’s conversations begin, the room gets a shared, current baseline. What is happening now in the quantum defence and security landscape — across military systems and critical infrastructure. What our allies and adversaries are building and investing in. Where Canada stands relative to both. Precise, current, and unvarnished. Presenter:
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| 09:25 | The National Security Case for Quantum Digital infrastructure underpins every system Canada depends on — military, economic, and civil. Quantum is the next layer. Who can see, communicate, navigate, and trust the integrity of their systems will be determined by who gets there first. That transition is already underway. This conversation sets the terms for the day. Senior voices from Canadian defence, national security, and the quantum technology sector work through what quantum means for Canada’s security — military and economic — and what it will take to lead that transition rather than respond to it. Session Host:
Panelists:
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| 10:40 | Quantum for Defence: Capability on Stage — Part 1 Four Canadian quantum technology companies. Five minutes each. Two questions per company: why does this matter to operators and how close is it to the field? These are not investor pitches. They are mission-grounded presentations of where the technology stands today and what it takes to get it into the field — delivered by the companies building it, to an audience with the authority to move it forward. Presenters:
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| 11:05 | What Makes a Quantum System Military Grade? Laboratory and proof of concept performance is the starting point, not the finish line. Getting a quantum system into operational service means meeting a demanding and specific set of requirements: qualification standards, certification pathways, platform integration, and survivability in harsh and contested environments over decades of service life. This session maps that pathway honestly, with the firms developing quantum systems, the primes and integrators responsible for platform architecture, and the government bodies that define what operational deployment actually requires. Where Canada is already meeting the bar and where it needs to move faster. Session Host:
Panelists:
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| 11:55 | Quantum for Defence: Capability on Stage — Part 2 Four Canadian quantum technology companies. Five minutes each. Two questions per company: why does this matter to operators and how close is it to the field? These are not investor pitches. They are mission-grounded presentations of where the technology stands today and what it takes to get it into the field — delivered by the companies building it, to an audience with the authority to move it forward. Presenters:
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| 13:15 | Quantum-Ready from the Outset: The Platform Decisions Happening Now Canada is making generational investments in submarines, surface combatants, Arctic surveillance systems, and secure communications networks — platforms that will define Canada’s defence posture into the 2060s. The decisions being made about their architecture today will determine whether quantum capability is built in from the start or added later at far greater cost. This session examines what quantum-enabled means for the programs at that inflection point, and what it takes to ensure Canada’s quantum sector is in that design conversation while the opportunity is still open. Session Host:
Panelists:
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| 14:05 | Financing the Frontier: Capital in the Quantum Defence Stack A Canadian quantum firm with an operational defence deployment is a different company — better capitalised, more competitive internationally, and positioned to grow. Defence is the first mover for quantum because the mission environment demands these capabilities ahead of most civilian markets, and the firms that get there will anchor Canada’s position in a technology sector that spans military systems, critical infrastructure, and global supply chains. This session examines the full capital picture — venture, growth, and public financing — and what it takes to build the funding architecture that gets Canadian quantum firms across that threshold. Session Host:
Panelists:
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| 15:20 |
Capability at Home, Capacity Together — Part One: Capability at Home Canada’s Defence Industrial Strategy makes an explicit commitment: Build-Partner-Buy. Quantum is the first real test of whether that commitment holds. It is the sector where Canada has named a sovereign capability, where it’s a globally recognized pioneer, where the industry is coordinated and engaged, and where the policy framework is fully in place. If the institutional machinery — requirements engagement, procurement tempo, contracting pathways — cannot deliver here, the signal that sends runs across the entire strategy. This conversation examines what delivery requires in the next twelve to twenty-four months: the process changes, the relationship commitments, and the actions that will determine whether quantum becomes the proof of concept for a generational shift in how Canada builds sovereign industrial capability. Session Host:
Panelists:
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| 16:05 |
Capability at Home, Capacity Together — Part Two: Capacity Together Quantum defence capability is being built across allied nations — and the supply chains, standards, and partnerships taking shape now will define who is at the table for the next generation of allied capability development. But the stakes extend beyond defence. The collaborative frameworks, investment relationships, and industrial partnerships that allies build together will also shape the emergence of a global quantum industry — determining which nations’ firms lead it, which supply chains anchor it, and which standards define it. This conversation brings allied and partner voices together to examine what collaboration looks like in practice: what interoperability requires, what is already working, and where the most immediate opportunities lie to build capability together — strengthening each nation’s sovereign position and the collective advantage that depends on it. Session Host:
Panelists:
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| 16:50 |
What Has to Be True The day ends not with a summary but with a forward commitment. Leading voices from the DND/CAF, Canada’s quantum sector, and the federal government — each answer one question: What has to be true, from your seat, for this to work? Session Host:
Discussants:
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| 17:05 |
Closing Remarks Emcee: Dr. Christian Sarra-Bournet, Executive Director, Institut Quantique de l’Université de Sherbrooke
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| 17:12 |
Wrap Up
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Director of Army Capability Integration
Canadian Armed Forces
Assistant Deputy Minister, Policy-Industry
Department of National Defence
Director General
Quantum and Nanotechnologies Research Centre
National Research Council Canada
Investment Director — Climate and Deep Tech Venture Capital
Fonds de solidarité FTQ
Director — National Quantum Strategy Secretariat
Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
Lead, Quantum Defence Innovation Secure Hub, BOREALIS Joint Program Office
Defence Research and Development Canada
Director General, Defence Industrial Strategy
Department of National Defence
Assistant Deputy Minister – Science and Research
Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC is a one-day, executive-level forum focused on turning Canada’s quantum strengths into deployed capability. It convenes Canada’s defence, security, and policy leaders alongside the country’s quantum technology sector and critical delivery partners to work through what it will take to move from promising technologies to operational systems.
QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC is designed for senior leaders involved in shaping, delivering, or adopting advanced capabilities in defence and security.
This includes:
The convening is structured to bring together participants across the full delivery chain — from technology development through to integration and operational use — enabling focused, executive-level discussion.
QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC offers three registration types, reflecting the mix of participants across the forum:
General Registration — $750 + HST
For industry, capital, academia, and ecosystem organizations.
QIC Member & Affiliate Registration — $400 + HST
For employees of QIC member and affiliate organizations.
(Company email may be used for verification.)
Government, Allied Armed Forces & Diplomatic Registration — $175 + HST
For government employees, active members of allied armed forces, and diplomatic representatives.
(Work email may be used for verification. Valid government, military, or diplomatic ID required at check-in.)
Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) Registration — FREE
For active members of the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF). (Work email may be used for verification. Valid military ID required at check-in.)
Registration includes access to the full-day program on May 25, lunch, and the evening networking reception sponsored by Q-Block Computing.
QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC is organized by Quantum Industry Canada (QIC) with support from the National Research Council Canada (NRC) and Canada’s National Quantum Strategy.
No. The forum is focused on operational and strategic implications, not technical deep dives. It is designed for decision-makers working at the intersection of technology, defence, and security.
No prior expertise in quantum is required.
QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC is designed to make the topic accessible and decision-relevant for senior leaders.
Whether you’re already working in the space or engaging with quantum for the first time, you’ll come away with a clear understanding of where it matters and what to do about it.
Yes! The forum brings together senior leaders from across Canada’s quantum industry, alongside defence, government, and ecosystem partners.
As one of the world’s most concentrated quantum ecosystems, Canada offers a unique opportunity to engage directly with technology developers, understand current and emerging capabilities, and explore applications and collaborations for defence and security.
There will be networking opportunities throughout the day, including a dedicated evening reception to wrap up the event.
Yes. A limited number of sponsorship opportunities are available for QUANTUM NOW | DEFSEC.
For more information about sponsorship please contact the Quantum Industry Canada (QIC) team directly at quantumnow@quantumindustrycanada.ca.
Note that speaking roles are curated as part of the program. Sponsorship does not guarantee participation in the program.
Due to limited capacity, registrations are non-refundable.
If you are unable to attend, ticket transfers may be requested up to May 20, 2026. We will do our best to accommodate these requests.