Road­map for Quan­tum Tech­no­lo­gy published

Fede­ral Govern­ment pres­ents Mile­sto­nes and Objec­ti­ves in four Key Are­as of Quan­tum Tech­no­lo­gies:

On 20 May 2026, the Bun­des­mi­nis­te­ri­um für For­schung, Tech­no­lo­gie und Raum­fahrt (BMFTR), acting on behalf of the fede­ral govern­ment, pre­sen­ted the first tech­no­lo­gy road­maps of the High­tech Agen­da Deutsch­land at a public press con­fe­rence. The­se stra­te­gic docu­ments were deve­lo­ped in clo­se coor­di­na­ti­on with the fede­ral sta­tes as well as stake­hol­ders from sci­ence and indus­try over a peri­od of seve­ral months. For the first time, they pro­vi­de a con­cre­te plan­ning frame­work for six key tech­no­lo­gies – inclu­ding Bio­tech­no­lo­gy, Arti­fi­ci­al Intel­li­gence (AI), and Quan­tum Tech­no­lo­gies. The road­maps com­bi­ne tech­no­lo­gy poli­cy objec­ti­ves with con­cre­te mile­sto­nes, mea­sura­ble indi­ca­tors, and cle­ar­ly desi­gna­ted imple­men­ta­ti­on part­ners.

The fede­ral government’s pri­ma­ry goal in the field of Quan­tum Tech­no­lo­gies is to estab­lish Ger­ma­ny as a glo­bal­ly lea­ding loca­ti­on for the deve­lo­p­ment and appli­ca­ti­on of the­se tech­no­lo­gies, ther­eby ensu­ring long-term tech­no­lo­gi­cal sove­reig­n­ty. To this end, con­cre­te appli­ca­ti­ons are to be rea­li­zed across the enti­re value chain – from basic rese­arch and sys­tem inte­gra­ti­on through to broad use in indus­try and socie­ty. The road­map for Quan­tum Tech­no­lo­gy focu­ses on four key are­as: Quan­tum Com­pu­ting, Quan­tum Sens­ing, Quan­tum Com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on, and edu­ca­ti­on and trai­ning of skil­led pro­fes­sio­nals. In the area of Quan­tum Com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on, the empha­sis is par­ti­cu­lar­ly on streng­thening and expan­ding the inno­va­ti­on eco­sys­tem. In this con­text, the per­spec­ti­ves of end users are also to be taken more stron­gly into account.

To achie­ve the­se goals, the fede­ral govern­ment defi­nes eight mile­sto­nes for the peri­od from 2026 to 2030, which are inten­ded to ser­ve as a gui­de for fur­ther deve­lo­p­ment. For 2026, the­se include the suc­cessful com­mis­sio­ning of the second QUBE rese­arch satel­li­te as well as the com­ple­ti­on of the QuN­ET initia­ti­ve. The lat­ter is con­side­red Germany’s rese­arch con­tri­bu­ti­on to the Euro­pean Euro­QCI initia­ti­ve. In 2027, an inno­va­ti­ve net­wor­king plat­form for tech­no­lo­gy trans­fer in Quan­tum Com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on is sche­du­led to launch. It is inten­ded to bring tog­e­ther stake­hol­ders across Ger­ma­ny and make bet­ter use of exis­ting syn­er­gies. For 2028, the road­map fore­sees, among other things, a second Grand Chall­enge to sup­port ear­ly-care­er rese­arch groups. At the same time, key com­pon­ents for long-ran­ge ter­restri­al Quan­tum Com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on are to be deve­lo­ped. In this con­text, the first tech­no­lo­gy demons­tra­ti­on of a quan­tum repea­ter deve­lo­ped within the joint pro­ject Quantenrepeater.Net (QR.N) is plan­ned for 2028. By 2030, Quan­tum Infor­ma­ti­on Net­works are expec­ted to be estab­lished in Ger­ma­ny accor­ding to the road­map. The­se are to be rese­ar­ched in coope­ra­ti­on with inter­na­tio­nal part­ners with a view to future use cases, and the resul­ting fin­dings are to feed into Euro­pean and natio­nal stan­dar­diza­ti­on pro­ces­ses.

Fur­ther infor­ma­ti­on on the tech­no­lo­gy road­maps is available from the fede­ral govern­ment online. In addi­ti­on, the BMFTR is invi­ting stake­hol­ders to par­ti­ci­pa­te and pro­vi­de feed­back. A public online con­sul­ta­ti­on has been ope­ned for a peri­od of six weeks. The respon­ses will direct­ly inform the fur­ther deve­lo­p­ment of the road­maps.

 

Source refe­ren­ces: https://www.bmftr.bund.de/SharedDocs/Kurzmeldungen/DE/2026/05/htad-tage.html; https://hightech-agenda-deutschland.de/roadmaps/quantentechnologien/