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IQM Scales Manufacturing, Enters Japan and Deepens Quantum Ecosystem Push

IQM Scales Manufacturing, Enters Japan and Deepens Quantum Ecosystem Push

IQM advanced its transition toward industrial-scale quantum computing this week, combining manufacturing expansion, new tools, and ecosystem initiatives. The company also launched a research award program and highlighted culture-building efforts that support talent attraction and retention in a competitive deep-tech field.

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IQM announced more than €40 million in investment to expand its Finnish manufacturing facilities, doubling cleanroom and assembly capacity to potentially produce over 30 full-stack quantum computers annually. The site is geared toward advanced chips for error-corrected and fault-tolerant systems, reinforcing Europe as a key quantum hardware hub.

The company reported that it has sold an IQM Radiance system to Toyo Corporation in what it calls Japan’s first enterprise quantum computing acquisition. This move extends IQM’s footprint to a third Asian market, after South Korea and Taiwan, and aligns with Japan’s sizable public investment and targets for quantum-capable users by 2030.

On the product side, IQM highlighted an April update to its pulse-level platform IQM Pulla, framed around a “Production Quantum” strategy. New features include transparent compilation, a unified job compiler, and extensive pulse-level optimization tools, giving advanced users deeper control over hardware performance and integration.

To foster adoption and innovation, IQM promoted its 2026 research and innovation awards, offering a year of free quantum access and a cash prize for projects from early-stage research to applied science. These programs are designed to lower access barriers, strengthen ties with academic and industrial partners, and broaden the pipeline of applications built on IQM’s technology.

IQM also showcased an internal sticker-design contest that emphasized quantum-themed humor and technical pride among employees. While not directly commercial, such initiatives support workforce cohesion and may enhance the company’s appeal to scarce quantum talent, which is critical for long-term execution.

In Europe, IQM spotlighted policy commentary from its Quantum Council member and former EU Digital Commissioner Viviane Reding, who advocates blended public–private financing and broader industry adoption. The forthcoming EU Quantum Act and instruments like the Scaleup Europe Fund could improve access to scale-up capital for players such as IQM.

Complementing these developments, IQM is expanding its global headcount beyond 300 employees and hosting technical webinars on practical materials simulations using quantum chemistry workflows. Overall, the week underscored IQM’s push toward larger-scale production, deeper customer integration, and a stronger position in emerging quantum ecosystems across Europe and Asia.

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