According to a recent LinkedIn post from Qunnect, New Mexico is being positioned as a growing hub for quantum technology experimentation and validation. The post highlights the presence of national laboratories, universities, and community colleges, combined with what is described as the nation’s only open-access quantum network, ABQ-Net.
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The post points to hundreds of millions of dollars in state incentives and collaboration among Los Alamos National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, The University of New Mexico’s Quantum Institute, and Central New Mexico Community College’s Quantum Bootcamp. This ecosystem is portrayed as providing infrastructure for quantum innovation and testing that may be attractive to companies and researchers.
For investors, the emphasis on ABQ-Net as an open-access quantum network suggests an emerging regional testbed that could lower R&D barriers for quantum communication and computing startups. If such infrastructure accelerates commercialization, companies operating in or partnering with New Mexico-based institutions could gain early-mover advantages in technical validation and potential government or institutional contracts.
The LinkedIn post also stresses timing, implying that near-term engagement with this ecosystem may be more advantageous than delayed entry. This framing may indicate growing competition for access to quantum-ready infrastructure and state-backed incentives, which could influence location decisions, partnership strategies, and long-term capital allocation for firms in the quantum technology value chain.

