Quantum Computing "Quantum Strategy": EU Aims for European Leadership in Quantum Technology

From Margit Kuther| Translated by AI 1 min Reading Time

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The EU Commission presented its "Quantum Strategy" at the beginning of July, aiming for Europe to take a leading role in the global race for quantum technologies. Bitkom President Dr. Ralf Wintergerst comments on the initiative.

"Quantum Strategy": The EU aims to take a leading role in the global race for quantum technologies.(Image: Gerd Altmann /  Pixabay)
"Quantum Strategy": The EU aims to take a leading role in the global race for quantum technologies.
(Image: Gerd Altmann / Pixabay)

The declared goal of the EU's "Quantum Strategy" is to establish a complete European value chain—from research to production to industrial application. It focuses particularly on strategic investments in infrastructure, talent, and startups and serves as a course setting for greater digital sovereignty.

"Quantum computing is a technological revolution, on par with AI. Quantum technology is a completely different way of computing, securely communicating, and measuring with previously unattainable precision," emphasizes Dr. Ralf Wintergerst.

"It has the potential to fundamentally change industries and redefine international competitiveness. With the 'Quantum Strategy' presented today, the EU Commission is setting the right course for Germany and Europe to become both leading users and competitive providers of this new technology in the future—thereby gaining more digital sovereignty."

Close Cooperation Among Member States is Required

"We must not fragment ourselves in quantum technology within the EU but rather rely on well-coordinated programs and close cooperation among member states. If we want European digital sovereignty, we need genuine European collaboration. Unlike in the past, it is possible to successfully transform Europe's scientific leadership in quantum technologies into a competitive industry at an early stage."

"Necessary for this are, among other things, easy access to infrastructure and the state as a key customer for quantum technology. Following the strategy presented today, Europe urgently needs a Quantum Act that backs the announcements with concrete actions and a strong financing framework, embedding it long-term to ensure planning security." (mk)

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