• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Techcouver.com

 
  • News
  • Events
  • Interviews
  • Thought Leadership
  • Web Summit Vancouver
  • Jobs
  • About
    • Contact Us

B.C. Quantum Institute Concludes Canada is ‘Punching Above Weight’ – With Some Concerns

June 24, 2024 by Knowlton Thomas Leave a Comment

Quantum computing promises a rapidly growing industry sector, data from McKinsey suggest, with potential to out-grow today’s US$670 billion semiconductor market.

However, there is a chronic global shortage of quantum expertise to support this growth, warns a new report from Surrey-based Quantum Algorithms Institute, a non-profit organization that facilitates collaboration among industry, academia in Canada.

While the quantum talent shortage problem is indeed a global issue, Canada’s quantum workforce offers a particularly “good illustration of this talent gap,” according to the Canadian Quantum Ecosystem Report.

The 2024 report estimates that just 0.01% of Canada’s workforce is in the quantum research and business communities.

Rapidly building a workforce that can provide the skills and expertise to capitalize on the commercialization of quantum “will require urgent and radical rethinking of ways to educate, train, and grow the quantum workforce,” QAI’s report reads, especially “in the face of existing talent shortages for deep tech companies which are already being exacerbated by the demand for talent in the newly growing AI sector.”

Beyond a lack of skilled talent in the quantum space to access, QAI’s report also found retention concerns: Primarily due to differences in salary, there remains a net brain drain, “mainly from Canada to the US.”

Despite suffering from both brain drain and a global talent shortage, Canada is “overall punching above its weight in all aspects of quantum,” the report concludes.

While our quantum workforce may appear small (roughly 4,000), for example, our country in fact houses 5% of the word’s quantum talent pool, an order of magnitude higher than our representation of the world’s population (0.5%).

This workforce is behind a “vibrant quantum business sector” comprising companies such as D-Wave, Xanadu, Anyon, Photonic, 1QBit, and Good Chemistry, who are helping pave the way on both scientific advances and development of market-ready quantum solutions.

And in addition, Canada’s quantum computing research output is top-10 globally.

“Canada is in a leadership position in quantum, building on decades of world-class quantum research,” stated Louise Turner, chief executive officer of the Quantum Algorithms Institute. “Our quantum workforce is strong and growing and we’re one of the world’s leaders in commercializing quantum computing, hardware, and software.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Quantum Algorithms Institute

 

About Knowlton Thomas

Knowlton Thomas is Editor-in-Chief of The Midway Advance and Senior Writer for Techcouver. Over more than a decade of journalism, he has penned thousands of articles and dozens of essays on technology, health, and culture across a variety of publications.

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

 

Stay Connected

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Community Partners

About Us

Techcouver provides real-time reporting and analysis of emerging technology news in Vancouver and throughout British … READ MORE... about About Us

Copyright © 2025 Incubate Ventures | Techtalent.ca · Decoder.ca · Calgary.tech · Fintech.ca · CleanEnergy.ca | Privacy