- Investments in quantum
technologies will help develop powerful
computers, sensors and navigation
systems - in a sector that could be
worth £11 billion by 2045
- Announcements today include £6
million joint funding for quantum research, £8 million
backing for research and tech firm Fraunhofer's Glasgow site, and
agreement for leading institutes to collaborate on quantum
standards
- Announcements round
off German President Frank-Walter
Steinmeier's State visit to the UK,
which showcased how UK and Germany's close partnership
is supporting growth and renewal
The UK and Germany have announced plans to work even more closely
together to unlock the vast potential of quantum technology, as
part of a suite of joint science and tech
announcements unveiled on the final day of the German
President's State Visit to the UK (Friday 5
December).
Quantum is a technology with huge commercial potential. By 2045
it could contribute £11 billion to UK GDP and over 100,000 jobs in the
UK alone. Quantum computers could help discover new medicines in
a fraction of the time it takes today, while quantum
sensors could be used in new medical scanners that
are more
affordable, portable and accurate than those
used currently.
The UK and Germany are the closest of strategic partners, and the
UK is already Germany's biggest research partner in Europe.
Today's suite of announcements further cements that deep
relationship, with £6 million pounds
of joint funding for quantum R&D, £8 million
investment in Fraunhofer UK's world-leading applied photonics
centre in Glasgow, and a new
agreement on quantum research standards.
UK Science Minister said:
Quantum technology will revolutionise fields such
as cybersecurity, drug discovery, medical imaging,
and much more. International collaboration is crucial
to unlocking these benefits.
With its deep R&D expertise,
top-tier skills and world leading institutions, Germany is a
natural partner to the UK in these efforts. This is
work that will not only advance the bounds of
knowledge, but will support stronger economies,
better jobs and healthy secure societies, in both our
countries.
Today's announcements include:
-
A £6 million joint quantum R&D funding call
from the UK and Germany will launch in early
2026, with Innovate UK and VDI
Germany contributing £3 million each
-
£8 million to support world leading research and development
at the Fraunhofer Centre for Applied Photonics in
Glasgow, accelerating growth by helping UK
businesses to bring new quantum products to market
-
The signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the
UK's National Physical Laboratory (NPL) and
Germany's Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), which
complements the NMI-Q
initiative - a global effort to develop shared quantum
standards
These announcements come on the final day of German
President Frank-Walter Steinmeier's State Visit to the
UK. He will see first-hand an example of how UK-Germany
collaboration on science and tech is supporting growth,
high-skilled jobs, and better health in both
countries on a visit to Siemens Healthineers. The
site in Oxford produces superconducting magnets for MRI scanners.
All of this builds on recent progress to broaden and deepen
the UK-Germany relationship on science and tech still
further. Just last week, UK Minister for Space
Baroness Lloyd concluded European Space Agency budget
negotiations, where the UK and Germany jointly funded over €6
billion of activity, of a total ESA budget of over €22
billion.
This included €1 billion joint funding for launch
programmes, and a €192 million shared commitment to the VIGIL
severe space weather mission, as well as other UK-Germany
investments in programmes driving growth and security. Elsewhere,
both countries are investing in space launch capabilities,
including €10 million for German company Rocket Factory Augsburg
planning launches from Scotland in 2026.
While in October, the UK's National Supercomputing Centre, based
at the University of Edinburgh, was selected by the European
High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU)
to host the UK's AI
Factory Antenna in partnership with
the HammerHAI AI Factory, based at the
High-Performance
Computing Center Stuttgart.
To further strengthen AI and compute collaboration
with partners including Germany, DSIT
is allocating up to £3.9 million to match fund UK participation
in 3 open
EuroHPC Calls. This funding will support UK teams to
develop exascale and AI-ready software, tools and
workflows in areas of national importance while collaborating
with Europe's leading computing centres.
All of these announcements reflect the UK and Germany's
shared commitment to delivering under the Strategic Science and
Technology Partnership, launched earlier this year alongside the
signing of the Kensington Treaty.
While the UK and Germany already work together as
members of some of the world's foremost international scientific
organisations, such as CERN, the
European Laboratory for Particle Physics, and Horizon
Europe.