Earlier this year, Australia agreed to invest nearly AUD $1 billion in U.S.-based quantum start-up PsiQuantum in an effort to become the first country to own a commercial-scale quantum computer.
The technology is expected to be operational by 2027.
“This investment marks the start of a manufacturing and production partnership that will create hundreds of local high-skilled jobs,” the Australian government said in an April press release. “It also offers exciting opportunities for our quantum sector that will drive significant economic benefits.”
However, the deal has raised a number of questions since being announced. These concerns include how PsiQuantum was selected, why Australia is betting so big on a single quantum technology, and the exclusivity of the deal, given PsiQuantum is also working on a quantum computer for the U.S.
TechRepublic has reached out to PsiQuantum for comment.
The Australian and Queensland governments have jointly invested AUD $940 million (US $630 million) into PsiQuantum to build the world’s first utility-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer in Australia, near Brisbane Airport in Queensland.
PsiQuantum said the computer will “solve commercially useful problems across industries built upon chemistry, math, and physics,” transforming critical industries like renewables and “propelling the global economy for decades to come.”
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The investment is split equally between the Australian and Queensland governments, with each contributing approximately AUD $470 million to the project. The parties have said the investment will involve a financial package comprising equity, grants, and loans.
PsiQuantum plans to scale a fusion-based architecture using a photonics approach, which encodes qubits into particles of light. The start-up will leverage advanced semiconductor manufacturing industry infrastructure to fabricate and test millions of photonic devices.
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This would result in a quantum computer with enough physical qubits to enable error-correction. PsiQuantum’s utility-scale system will have 1 million physical qubits and be hyperscale in footprint with a modular architecture able to leverage cryogenic cooling technologies.
The success of the PsiQuantum’s project could give Australia a jump-start in quantum computing and facilitate further enrichment of Australia’s local quantum technology industry. But there are still a number of questions about the deal since it was announced in 2024.
Two of PsiQuantum’s co-founders — CEO Jeremy O’Brien and Chief Architect Terry Rudolph — are from Australia. O’Brien’s career includes a decade at the University of Queensland, where the idea and early research for a photonic-based quantum computer was born.
However, PsiQuantum is based in the U.S. The investment in a U.S.-based quantum start-up has been questioned by local players, especially in the context of the Australian government’s Future Made in Australia policy, which seeks to invest more in Australian companies.
Paul Fletcher, Australia’s shadow minister for Science, Arts, Government Services, and the Digital Economy, claims other local quantum companies — such as Silicon Quantum Computing, Diraq, and Quantum Brilliance — were not considered closely for investment.
The PsiQuantum deal includes a commitment to help foster Australia’s quantum computing industry. It has formed a strategic partnership with five Queensland universities to build targeted education programs for skills in quantum computing and other advanced technology industries.
“Australia and Queensland have been world leaders in the field of quantum computing for decades, and this partnership builds upon that foundation,” PsiQuantum’s Jeremy O’Brien said in a press release. “This collaboration will help ensure that Australia is developing the necessary skills and driving research to continue leading this field for decades to come.”
Should Australia be acting like a venture capital firm?
This question arises as Australia invests a substantial amount of public money in the hope of “picking a winner” in the quantum race, though the specific technology is unproven.
Australia has concentrated a significant portion of its quantum investment — and associated risk — in a single company, whereas other countries are spreading their quantum bets more widely due to the uncertain nature of the market and technology.
For example, the U.K spent just $17 million to lure PsiQuantum to open a plant there. The U.K., like other countries, is investing smaller amounts across a range of competing technologies so that it can pivot when required.
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In a letter to the Australian National Audit Office, Fletcher wrote:
“Currently throughout the world there are different types of quantum technologies under development. Eminent global academic quantum experts, including Australian academics, are unable to say for certain which technology will be proven and be able to be delivered at scale.”
In August 2024, Australia’s Acting Auditor-General Rona Mellor confirmed that the Australian National Audit Office was considering an official audit of the PsiQuantum deal.
Responding to a letter and referral by Shadow Minister Paul Fletcher, Mellor indicated that it had been added for consideration to its program of work for this financial year.
Another issue that could be reviewed is the expedited Expression of Interest process, which sought feedback from other Australian quantum companies regarding potential investments in their companies. Fletcher called the process a “sham” given parts of the PsiQuantum deal were moving ahead.
Australians may only have a year to enjoy owning the first useful quantum computer. Soon after Australia’s announcement, PsiQuantum revealed it would build a second computer in Chicago in the U.S. by 2028, where it would be leveraging learnings from the Australian experience.
The U.S. deal raises questions over the value Australia is receiving from its $1 billion spend, given the technology will soon be located elsewhere, and the intellectual property gained by PsiQuantum in the development of Australia’s computer will be leveraged by the U.S.
The Australian quantum industry may end up benefiting greatly from the housing of the world’s first fault-tolerant quantum computer. With PsiQuantum set to have its APAC base in Brisbane, Queensland and Australia could become a hub for quantum innovation.
However, the Australian Government can only hope that, come 2027, PsiQuantum’s technology delivers on its promise — at which point lingering questions will be dwarfed by the promise the computer could have for industry in Australia and beyond.