Trinity College Dublin Joins European Quantum Academy

Industry May 16, 2026

May 15, 2026 -- Trinity College Dublin joins as a key Irish partner in the newly funded European Quantum Academy (EQA), a major pan-European initiative designed to strengthen Europe’s quantum education, skills and workforce pipeline.

The EQA brings together more than 70 partner institutions across over 20 European countries to create a coordinated framework for quantum education and training spanning higher education, research and industry. Backed by €19.8 million in funding, the Academy will act as Europe’s central coordinating body for quantum technology education as quantum computing, sensing and communications transition from research to real-world applications.

Trinity will play a leading role in the initiative, drawing on its established strengths in quantum science education and research. The University will co-lead the EQA pillar on taught graduate education and co-lead one of the six Regional Quantum Academies for North‑Western Europe, helping to shape curricula, advanced training activities, and student and lecturer mobility across Europe.

Trinity’s MSc in Quantum Science and Technology, launched in 2021 within the School of Physics, provides the foundation for its contribution to graduate-level training within the EQA. The Trinity Quantum Alliance will additionally strengthen connections between the Academy and Ireland’s growing quantum technology industry.

“The EQA allows us to integrate and expand our teaching and training in quantum science and technology at a truly international level. Strong international links are essential for Ireland to play a decisive role in this field, and the EQA enables us to build and strengthen those links for quantum education.”
– Felix Binder, Assistant Professor in Quantum Science and Course Director, MSc in Quantum Science & Technology, Trinity College Dublin

Ireland’s participation also includes ICHEC at the University of Galway and the Walton Institute at South East Technological University, which together with Trinity contribute complementary expertise across quantum education, infrastructure and industry engagement.

Ireland’s involvement in the European Quantum Academy is co-funded by the European Union through the Digital Europe Programme and by the Government of Ireland through the Department of Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science.

Through its leadership role in the EQA, Trinity College Dublin will help shape Europe’s next generation of quantum scientists and professionals, opening new opportunities for students, researchers and industry partners to engage with Europe’s rapidly evolving quantum science and technology ecosystem.