Updated
Updated · HPCwire · Jun 3
Quobly Raises €115 Million Series A to Industrialize Silicon Quantum Computers
Updated
Updated · HPCwire · Jun 3

Quobly Raises €115 Million Series A to Industrialize Silicon Quantum Computers

3 articles · Updated · HPCwire · Jun 3

Summary

  • €115 million in new funding will help Quobly move from technology validation to industrial execution and launch its first commercial quantum system by the end of 2026.
  • The Grenoble-based company plans to offer Alloy Pioneer through the cloud in 2026, then deploy it inside high-performance computing infrastructures in 2027.
  • Bpifrance, SEALSQ and STMicroelectronics led the round, with backing from the European Innovation Council, Blast, Air Liquide's venture arm ALIAD and existing investor Innovacom.
  • Quobly says its silicon-qubit approach uses FD-SOI technology on 300 mm wafers, aiming to make quantum hardware more scalable, reproducible and easier to fit into existing data-center environments.
  • The raise follows a €19 million seed phase from 2023 to 2025 and underscores a broader push to commercialize quantum systems through established semiconductor manufacturing.

Insights

With €115M, has Quobly cracked the code for mass-producing powerful and reliable silicon quantum chips?
How will embedding post-quantum security make Quobly’s first computer uniquely safe against future threats?

Quobly Secures €115M Series A to Scale Silicon-Based Quantum Computing for European Sovereignty

Overview

Quobly has secured €115 million in Series A funding, reinforcing its position as a key innovator at the intersection of quantum computing, semiconductor manufacturing, and high-performance computing. By combining breakthrough scientific capability with strong industrial execution, Quobly integrates advanced quantum research with proven semiconductor processes. This strategic approach enables the company to turn scientific breakthroughs into real industrial applications, driving both innovation and industrialization. As a result, Quobly is not only advancing practical quantum computing but also contributing to strategic independence in vital technology sectors, shifting the focus from pure research to scalable, real-world solutions.

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