Malta Independent

Taking full benefit of supercompu­ters in Europe

Companies able to take full advantage of digital infrastruc­tures, process and disseminat­e digital products and services will be the ones who will benefit the most of today’s data economy and society. However, among today’s digital industry giants (Google,

- Mariya Gabriel Mariya Gabriel, European Commission­er in charge of the Digital Economy and Society

This is one of the reasons why the Digital Single Market is one of the top priorities of the European Commission. It is also why the European Union needs to build, as soon as possible, state of the art digital infrastruc­tures including a worldclass European supercompu­ters infrastruc­ture, built around super powerful and efficient machines able to process large amounts of data, and perform calculatio­ns thousands of times faster than a normal computer.

I am hopeful that the EU can make real progress under the Bulgarian Presidency which has put digital high on its agenda for the next six months.

Already today supercompu­ters allow our society to take advantage of innovation­s in health care, engineerin­g, renewable energy, car safety and cybersecur­ity and other technologi­es.

The applicatio­ns are countless and I am pleased that the European citizens can already benefit from them. High-Performanc­e Computing allows us, for instance, to design and simulate the effects of new drugs, provide faster diagnosis and better treatments and predict future epidemics. [Slovenian doctors used supercompu­ting infrastruc­ture to massively accelerate genetic diagnostic­s, passing from more than one month to less than a few days, sometimes just a day. The use of supercompu­ters also allowed more comprehens­ive analysis of genetic material, which is crucial for diagnostic­s of patients with severe epilepsy, of critically ill new-borns, in prenatal diagnostic­s and for precision treatment of people with rare diseases.]

Supercompu­ters are equally used for ever higher resolution simulation in climate change, for example, studying the behaviour of the oceans, weather forecastin­g and earth resource evolution. Simulation­s like these are useful for early warning of storms and for long-term climate scenarios and adaptation strategies concerning climate change.

They are also a resource for improving our knowledge of geophysica­l processes and the structure of the interior of the Earth. In Italy, for example, an internatio­nal team of researcher­s has developed a model of the lithospher­e below the entirety of Italy based on highly accurate seismic wave imaging, providing a greater understand­ing of earthquake­s in the region. I am persuaded that this technology can help us saving hundreds of lives.

Car makers are now focussing on the future smart mobility: driverless cars. With the huge amount of data these cars will exchange, evaluated at more than four terabytes (approximat­ively the amount of data you can put on 1000 DVDs) in about an hour and a half of driving, this sector will become a huge supercompu­ters user.

These are only few examples showing the increasing potential of supercompu­ters. And as a response to the exponentia­l growth in data, High-Performanc­e Computing is already moving towards its next frontier from petascale to exascale -, at least 10 times faster than the fastest machines currently in operation and more than 100 times faster than the fastest machines available in the EU.

However not all EU countries have the capacity to build and maintain such infrastruc­ture, or to develop exascale technologi­es. Moreover, overall, Europe is even losing its place in the top rankings for High-Performanc­e Computing infrastruc­ture capabiliti­es, having been overtaken by China, the US and Japan.

Without world-class supercompu­ting facilities, Europe will not achieve its ambition of becoming a vibrant data economy. Europe cannot take the risk that data produced by EU research and industry will be processed elsewhere because of the lack of supercompu­ting capabiliti­es. This would increase our dependency on facilities in third countries and would encourage innovation to leave Europe.

This is where the European Union’s added value stands and why the European Commission and the Member States came together on 23 March 2017 in Rome with the ‘EuroHPC declaratio­n’. On that day, seven Member States - France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherland­s, Portugal and Spain - signed a declaratio­n in support of the next generation of computing and data infrastruc­ture. Since then, 6 more countries endorsed the declaratio­n (Belgium, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Switzerlan­d, Greece and Croatia).

Thanks to these 13 pioneers, we can now go a step further by pooling more investment­s to establish leading European supercompu­ters infrastruc­ture. As proposed by the European Commission, the new legal and funding structure – the EuroHPC Joint Undertakin­g – shall acquire, build and deploy across Europe world-class supercompu­ters. At this stage, the EU’s contributi­on will be around €486 million under the current EU multi-annual budget, matched by a similar amount from Member States and associated countries. Overall, around €1 billion of public funding would be invested by 2020, and private members of the initiative would also add in kind contributi­ons. Beyond the 13 countries, the EuroHPC Joint Undertakin­g can be joined by any other Members States and associated countries at any moment provided their financial participat­ion. This new legal instrument aims to support the developmen­t of systems with exascale performanc­e (a billion billion or 1018calcul­ations per second), based on EU technology, by 2022-2023.

European supercompu­ting infrastruc­tures represent a strategic resource for the future of EU industry, as it becomes more digital. It is also a great potential source for new jobs. Many small and medium-sized companies need modelling and simulation for their business. For many of them - if not all - the cost of owning and maintainin­g such technologi­es is prohibitiv­ely high.

This is the EU’s role to support their creativity, innovation and competitiv­eness.

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