EuroHPC

EuroHPC is a collaboration between the EU, individual countries and private actors working to establish a supercomputing ecosystem in Europe.

EuroHPC

EuroHPC works to make Europe a leading role in the areas of in High Performance Computing (HPC) and to give European players access to necessary computing power.

EuroHPC brings together the many existing and future forces working with "high performance computing" in Europe to create better conditions for coordination between efforts and make HPC more accessible to European players. The ambition is for Europe to be a leader in the use of supercomputers and digital technologies to solve a wide range of tasks in research, green transition, artificial intelligence, etc.

EuroHPC specifically seeks to create better conditions for research, but public and private actors can also apply for and gain access to HPC through the EuroHPC collaboration. Denmark has participated in the EuroHPC collaboration since 2021. Danish participation in the EuroHPC initiatives is coordinated by DeiC and the Danish Agency for Higher Education and Science.

DeiC is a partner in the LUMI machine in Finland. In addition, there are a number of other large supercomputers in operation, established by EuroHPC, including Leonardo in Italy, MN5 in Spain, Discoverer in Bulgaria, Vega in Slovenia and others. In addition, the first exascale supercomputer JUPITER will also be part of EuroHPC in the near future.

HPC for Danish entities

Because Denmark participates in the collaboration, Danish entities have the opportunity to apply for access to HPC via EuroHPC. Companies, researchers and public authorities can apply for free access to all EuroHPC machines.

EuroHPC JU

The European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) is a collaboration between the EU, European countries and private actors to develop a world-class supercomputing ecosystem. Founded in 2017, it has 33 member countries.

Contact us

If you want to know more about the project, you can contact the following people at DeiC:

Eske Christiansen