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IQM Quantum Computers Expands Role in European Quantum-HPC Infrastructure

IQM Quantum Computers Expands Role in European Quantum-HPC Infrastructure

According to a recent LinkedIn post from IQM Quantum Computers, the Euro-Q-Exa quantum computer is now operational at the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre in Garching, Munich. The system is described as the first EuroHPC Joint Undertaking quantum computer for Germany and is based on IQM’s Radiance platform with 54 superconducting qubits.

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The post indicates that a second, more powerful Euro-Q-Exa system with 150 qubits is planned for delivery by the end of 2026, further expanding Europe’s quantum capacity. Attendance by senior EU and German officials at the inauguration suggests strong public-sector backing and reinforces IQM’s positioning within Europe’s sovereign digital and high-performance computing infrastructure.

IQM’s post also asserts that the company has sold more quantum computers than any other firm over the last five years, implying a leading commercial position in a nascent but strategically important market. For investors, the deployment at a major supercomputing center and the roadmap to a larger system may signal growing revenue opportunities tied to government-funded research, HPC integration, and early industrial quantum applications.

The integration of quantum hardware alongside world-leading HPC resources at LRZ, as highlighted in the post, underscores momentum toward hybrid quantum–HPC use cases in Europe. This could enhance IQM’s competitive standing against global peers by anchoring its technology in flagship public infrastructures and may support longer-term visibility for contracts, ecosystem partnerships, and potential future funding.

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