Times-Call (Longmont)

Colo. makes pitch for federal support

Competing with Illinois, next phase of tech program could provide billions in funding and spur developmen­t

- By Lucas High Bizwest / Daily Camera

DENVER >> It’s Chicago versus Colorado — and, no, I’m not talking about the game last October when the Broncos narrowly edged out the Bears for Denver’s first win of the season. Rather than a battle for touchdowns, this competitio­n between the Windy City and the Centennial State is for billions of dollars in federal support for quantum technology and business developmen­t.

Colorado — along with partners in Wyoming and New Mexico — is contending with Illinois to move into the second phase of the U.S. Department of Commerce’s “Tech Hub” program for the advancemen­t of quantum technologi­es. Local quantum research luminaries gathered with techbusine­sses gurus and government officials Wednesday in Denver to make their pitch for the Mountain West at the Elevate Quantum Summit.

“Colorado leads the world in quantum companies, quantum jobs and quantum innovation,” Colorado Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade executive director Eve Lieberman said. “We are at the forefront of developing this transforma­tive field, which will change the way that we live, diversify our economy and create good paying jobs.”

Quantum theory attempts to explain the behavior of matter at atomic and subatomic levels. Quantum computers take advantage of special properties of quantum systems such as superposit­ion that allow them to “operate exponentia­lly faster than traditiona­l computers,” Boston Consulting Group quantum lead Matt Langione said.

Applicatio­ns of quantum science could revolution­ize the way humans discover new drug therapies, map the cosmos, protect sensitive data, combat climate change and maybe even discover new forms of life.

Quantum theory and the technologi­es and businesses that grow from it “represent an entire ecosystem and the opportunit­y of a lifetime,” Elevate Quantum chief executive Zachary Yerushalmi said.

The effort to establish the state as a quantum technology hub was led by Elevate Quantum, a consortium of about 70 stakeholde­rs in the quantum space who represent industry, academia, capital and laboratori­es.

“The consortium grew out of Techhubnow!, a public-private partnershi­p establishe­d by Gov. Jared Polis in April 2023 to respond to a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y to grow the nation’s advanced and emerging technology industries,” Polis’ office said. “Under the CHIPS and Science Act, the U.S. Economic Developmen­t Administra­tion oversaw a competitiv­e process to select 31 federally designated

Tech Hubs across the country, with $500 million in appropriat­ed funding available in 2023 and $10 billion over five years.”

If Colorado tops Illinois in the federal government’s selection process for the second phase of the Tech Hub program, the state will have access to a larger chunk of funding. The current applicatio­n is due in February with a decision expected from President Joe Biden’s administra­tion by early summer.

“We see this as a way of leveraging federal resources” to help boost Colorado’s quantum businesses and research institutio­ns, of which there are many, Polis said.

The Boulder Valley — with the world-class University of Colorado Boulder physics department, the National Institute of Standards and Technology and JILA (formerly known as the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysi­cs) — has become, over the past three decades or so, the epicenter of quantum research.

“While the rest of the world was waking up, Colorado’s quantum revolution was already in full swing,” Polis said.

The region, a leader in evolving quantum discoverie­s out of the lab and into the marketplac­e, is home to operations from major corporate players in the stillnasce­nt industry such as Quantinuum, a Broomfield company spun out of Honeywell Internatio­nal Inc. (Nasdaq: HON); California­headquarte­red Atom Computing Inc., which opened a Boulder R&D center last year; and Coldquanta Inc., a Boulder-born firm that does business as Infleqtion that has grown into a worldwide operator with offices as far flung as Austin, Australia and the United Kingdom.

Many of the Boulder Valley players are involved in the Elevate Quantum initiative, which is chaired by Dan Caruso, founder of Boulder-based Zayo Group and of Caruso Ventures, a major investor in local quantum companies.

Because of its sustained commitment to the quantum field over a period of decades, Colorado “can punch at global levels,” Yerushalmi said, and “compete on a level on par with nation states.”

Despite its prominence in the field, the Front Range isn’t synonymous with quantum technology in the way that California’s Silicon Valley is with software developmen­t.

“Colorado is very quiet about it, but it’s secretly the driving force in the quantum revolution,” NIST quantum physicist Marlou Slot said, because of the Centennial State’s strength in the quantum hardware and applicatio­ns developmen­t space. For example, Atom Computing Inc. recently built the first commercial quantum computer to exceed 1,000 qubits in its Boulder facility.

To help foster that space, Colorado officials announced Wednesday that quantum-industry supporters in the U.S. Congress are putting forth “new bipartisan

legislatio­n to maximize Colorado’s competitiv­eness as a tech hub and strengthen the state’s economy.”

While the specifics of this proposed legislatio­n remain fuzzy, Polis’ office said that the bill will set the stage for “meaningful investment­s through a multi-year refundable tax credit program to develop” laboratory and fabricatio­n space for quantum businesses and a quantum industry loan loss reserve “to create greater access to capital for small and medium Colorado quantum computing companies that would otherwise have limited access to capital.”

This article was first published by Bizwest, an independen­t news organizati­on, and is published under a license agreement. © 2024 Bizwest Media LLC. You can view the original here: Colorado’s quantum community makes pitch for billions of dollars in federal support

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