QAL

Quantum Application Development Enters a New Stage for QAL Consortium Members

After 5 years of end-user driven quantum computing application development, the Quantum Application Lab (QAL) members will pursue different approaches and emphases in their mission towards developing useful quantum computing applications. As of 1st of August 2026, the QAL collaboration will come to an end following the completion of the term of the agreement between the participating organisations.

QAL was initiated in October 2021 with a Memorandum of Understanding / Letter of Commitment between six Dutch organisations, aiming to bring together industry and research to explore early applications of quantum computing. On March 23, 2022, this collaboration was formalised through the signing of a cooperation agreement.

Since then, multiple projects have been carried out with partners across different sectors, including organisations willing to take a leading role in the early stages of quantum application development. A first showcase was hosted during the 1-year anniversary in 2023.

These activities resulted in new insights and project outcomes related to quantum computing applications. In 2024, progress and results were discussed during the mid-term review of Quantum Delta NL (QDNL). More recently, project results have also been highlighted in the FD Special on quantum technology, including use cases with organisations such as Air France-KLM and Alliander.

During the International Year of Quantum in 2025, a final collaboration with the World Food Programme was started, with the first results to be shared soon.

The decision to not renew the collaboration agreement reflects a mutual understanding of the evolving priorities of each organisation and the current landscape for quantum applications. The former parties to the QAL cooperation agreement each continue on their path towards developing useful quantum computing applications.

TNO expands its efforts in developing end-user driven applications with the  TNO QAL Facility. The CWI and UvA rely on their ongoing collaboration in doing frontier research in quantum software, quantum information and quantum computing at QuSoft. SURF works towards hosting their own quantum computer and integrating its capabilities with their other high-performance computing services. Quantum Inspire retains its ambition to host open-access quantum computing-in-the-cloud for the Netherlands, welcoming application research in collaboration with other quantum researchers at TU Delft. And the Netherlands eScience Center focusses on its core practice of developing high-level research software for academic Netherlands.

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