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Queensland the home of Quantum

19 November 2024
Backs of an audience in a dark conference room facing the stage.
Internationally recognised experts will gather in Brisbane in March 2025 for the Quantum Australia Conference. Image: Adobe.

Growing Australia’s quantum ecosystem will be the focus when hundreds of delegates from government, industry and research converge in Brisbane next year.

The Quantum Australia Conference from 25-27 March is the inaugural public initiative of the Quantum Australia Growth Centre, which was awarded $18.7 million by the Federal Government to support the development of the quantum industry.

The annual conference was previously coordinated by the Sydney Quantum Academy, and this will be the first time it has been held outside of Sydney.

QA board member Stephanie Moroz said the timing of the conference aligns with the World Science Festival Brisbane, which will officially start in Brisbane on 21 March.

“As 2025 is the International Year of Quantum, our conference is collaborating with the Festival to create a streamlined experience for delegates throughout the week and to allow synergies between programming for these two key events,” Ms Moroz said.

 “This will be an opportunity for a broad audience to learn firsthand about what is happening in the industry. We aim to raise awareness and educate industries and society generally on the opportunities of emerging quantum technologies.”

The Queensland node of Quantum Australia is led by The University of Queensland and includes Griffith University and the University of Southern Queensland.

UQ quantum researchers Associate Professor Jacqui Romero and  Dr Tyler Neely are co-chairing the program committee, which brings together internationally recognised experts for the conference at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre.

“The Quantum Australia team is developing a comprehensive program that will include content focused on global advancements in quantum technology, the current and future policy landscape, and how quantum is impacting sectors as diverse as mining, health, sports and the arts,” Associate Professor Romero said.

“There will also be hands-on workshops focused on commercialisation of quantum technologies and real-world use cases for industry, government, education and research.”

Participants can now register for early bird tickets and find more information about the Quantum Australia Conference at https://quantumaus.eventsair.com/qac2025/.

 

Media contact

UQ Communications
communications@uq.edu.au
+61 429 056 139

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