Close Menu
    Latest Category
    • Finance
    • Tech
    • EU Law
    • Energy
    • About
    • Contact
    EUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politicsEUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politics
    Login
    • EU News
    • Focus
    • Guides
    • Press
    • Jobs
    • Events
    • Directory
    EUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politicsEUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politics
    Home » EU looks to spend EUR 1bn on supercomputer plan

    EU looks to spend EUR 1bn on supercomputer plan

    npsnps12 January 2018 Research & Technology
    — Filed under: EU News Headline1
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    EU looks to spend EUR 1bn on supercomputer plan

    Supercomputers – Image Blue Gene – PFrom Argonne National Laboratory

    (BRUSSELS) – The European Commission unveiled Thursday its plans to invest jointly with the Member States in building a world-class European supercomputers infrastructure.

    Supercomputers process ever larger amounts of data and are seen as bringing benefits to society in areas from health care and renewable energy to car safety and cybersecurity.

    The Commission says its initiative is essential for the EU’s competitiveness and independence in the data economy. It cites the fact that European scientists and industry increasingly process their data outside the EU because their needs are not matched by the computation time or computer performance available in the EU. This lack of independence, it says, threatens privacy, data protection, commercial trade secrets, and ownership of data in particular for sensitive applications.

    A new legal and funding structure – the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking – will acquire, build and deploy across Europe a world-class High-Performance Computing (HPC) infrastructure. It will also support a research and innovation programme to develop the technologies and machines (hardware) as well as the applications (software) that would run on these supercomputers.

    The EU’s contribution to EuroHPC will be around EUR 486 million under the current Multiannual Financial Framework, matched by a similar amount from Member States and associated countries. Overall, around EUR 1 billion of public funding would be invested by 2020, and private members of the initiative would also add in kind contributions.

    “The EU is lagging behind,” said Andrus Ansip, Commission Vice-President for the Digital Single Market: “Supercomputers are the engine to power the digital economy. It is a tough race and today we do not have any supercomputers in the world’s top-ten. With the EuroHPC initiative we want to give European researchers and companies world-leading supercomputer capacity by 2020 – to develop technologies such as artificial intelligence and build the future’s everyday applications in areas like health, security or engineering.”

    High-Performance Computing helps with understanding and responding to major scientific and societal challenges such as early detection and treatment of diseases or developing new therapies based on personalised and precision medicine. HPC is also used for preventing and managing large-scale natural disasters, notably for forecasting the paths which the hurricanes are following or for earthquake simulations.

    The EuroHPC infrastructure will provide European industry and in particular small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) with a better access to supercomputers to develop innovative products. The use of High Performance Computing has a growing impact on industries and businesses by significantly reducing product design and production cycles, accelerating the design of new materials, minimising costs, increasing resource efficiency and shortening and optimising decision processes. For example, car production cycles can be reduced thanks to supercomputers from 60 months to 24 months.

    High-Performance Computing is also seen as essential for national security and defence, for example when developing complex encryption technologies, tracking and responding to cyberattacks, deploying efficient forensics or in nuclear simulations.

    Today’s initiative will pool investments to establish leading European supercomputers and big data infrastructure. The EuroHPC Joint Undertaking aims to acquire systems with pre-exascale performance (a hundred million billion or 1017 calculations per second), and support the development of exascale (a billion billion or 1018 calculations per second), performance systems based on EU technology, by 2022-2023.

    The activities of the Joint Undertaking will consist of:

    • Acquisition and operation of two world-class pre-exascale supercomputing machines and at least two mid-range supercomputing machines (capable of around 1016 calculations per second), and providing and managing access to these supercomputers to a wide range of public and private users starting from 2020.
    • Research and innovation programme on HPC: to support the development of European supercomputing technology including the first generation of European low-power microprocessor technology, and the co-design of European exascale machines, and to foster applications, skills development and a wider use of High-Performance Computing.

    The EuroHPC Joint Undertaking will operate in 2019-2026. The planned infrastructure will be jointly owned and operated by its members consisting at first of the countries that have signed the EuroHPC declaration (list below) and private members from academia and industry. Other members can join this cooperation at any moment, provided their financial contribution.

    High-Performance Computing and EuroHPC initiative

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    nps
    • Website

    Related Content

    Small businesses - Photo by Fox on Pexels

    Navigating the European Union’s Strategy for Startup and Scaleup Businesses: Guide for Entrepreneurs

    Lithium producing plant - Photo by Glenn Arcos © European Union 2023

    Strategic EU projects on critical raw materials gain momentum

    EUSPA logo

    Senior Legal and Procurement Officer, European Union Agency for the Space Programme, EUSPA

    Director of Programmes, European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere, ESO

    Melanie Joly and Henna Virkkunen - Photo © European Union 2025

    AI, digital ID wallets, independent media the focus for strengthened EU-Canada partnership

    Egypt-EU - Rania AlMashat, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Antonio Costa, Ursula von der Leyen, Valdis Dombrovskis - Photo © European Union 2025

    Egypt second African country to join EU’s Horizon Europe research programme

    LATEST EU NEWS
    Trade in cars - Photo by Tom Fisk on Pexels

    EU trade in goods in Q4 2025 shows EUR 28.4 bn surplus

    18 February 2026
    Raffaele Fitto - Photo by Bogdan Hoyaux © European Union 2026

    EU to step up support for states bordering Russia, Belarus and Ukraine

    18 February 2026
    SHEIN - Photo by appshunter.io on Unsplash

    EU launches probe in Shein for potentially selling child sexual abuse material

    17 February 2026
    Tax haven - Photo by John Prefer on Unsplash

    EU adds Vietnam and Turks & Caicos Islands to tax havens blacklist

    17 February 2026
    Albares Bueno - Sefcovic - Photo by Bogdan Hoyaux © European Union 2025

    Brussels adopts Gibraltar treaty proposals

    17 February 2026

    Subscribe to EUbusiness Week

    Get the latest EU news

    CONTACT INFO

    • EUbusiness, 117 High Street, Chesham Buckinghamshire, HP5 1DE, United Kingdom
    • +44(0)20 8058 8232
    • service@eubusiness.com

    INFORMATION

    • About Us
    • Advertising
    • Contact Info

    Services

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • EU News

    SOCIAL MEDIA

    Facebook
    eubusiness.com © EUbusiness Ltd 2026

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Sign In or Register

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below.

    Lost password?