New Mexico Is Building A Quantum Computing Hub

New Mexico Is Building A Quantum Computing Hub


In this week’s edition of The Prototype, we look at New Mexico’s plans to build a quantum computing ecosystem, a startup that can take methane and turn it into clean fuel for cheap, shocking your immune system for faster healing and more. To get The Prototype in your inbox, sign up here.

New Mexico is teaming up with the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to invest in quantum computing. Under the terms of the agreement, each will provide up to $60 million over the next four years to build quantum computers that can solve problems that are out of reach for conventional processors. While that’s tiny compared to the mountains of cash going into AI, it’s big for the emerging technology, which saw less than $2 billion in government support globally last year.

This is part of a larger effort to turn the state into a quantum computing hub. Last month, New Mexico and Roadrunner Venture Studios started a $25 million venture studio to build infrastructure–such as a quantum network, lab testbeds and prototype facility–to attract quantum startups to a campus being built in Albuquerque. New Mexico governor Michelle Lujan Grisham told me the state is throwing its weight behind quantum computing because of its promise to revolutionize sectors such as renewable energy and healthcare. She also noted that the presence of two federal national labs gives New Mexico “more PhDs per capita than any other state,” providing a strong talent pool for the nascent sector.

“It’s going to require a lot of scientific effort,” she said. “But we’re willing to create that business ecosystem.”

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