In 2020, Singapore’s National Research Foundation committed $96.6 million in new funding to QEP and appointed Associate Professor Alexander Ling as QEP Director.
QEP aims to develop quantum science and technology into solutions for real-world problems, combining technical skills and industry insight. Earlier this year, Singapore’s National Research Foundation (NRF) committed a further $96.6 million to the programme. QEP was originally launched in 2018 with a $25 million investment.
Under the first phase of QEP funding, seven projects are already underway at local universities. The new funding will support further projects over five years across four pillars: communication and security, computing, sensors and foundry. The programme also has new leadership, with Alexander Ling appointed Director of the programme in September 2020. He is a Principal Investigator at the Centre for Quantum Technologies (CQT) and an Associate Professor in the NUS Department of Physics.
Assoc Prof Ling has experience in translational research. He leads a group that has advanced the engineering of quantum communication devices for trials on Singapore’s urban fibre network and in nanosatellites in space. He is also a co-founder of two quantum spin-off companies, S-Fifteen Instruments and SpeQtral.
“Our quantum community has a good base of technical knowledge on which we can build new capabilities to solve national challenges and ensure value-capture for Singapore,” says Assoc Prof Ling. As Director of QEP, he reports to a steering committee led by the Chief Executive Officer of NRF, Prof Low Teck Seng, and Singapore’s Chief Defence Scientist, Mr Quek Gim Pew.
CQT Director José Ignacio Latorre, who also serves as a member of the QEP steering committee, says, “We welcome the role of the Quantum Engineering Programme in Singapore in turning discoveries from the edge of knowledge into technologies that can improve human lives. With Alexander Ling as Director, the programme is in good hands. Alexander has distinguished himself as a Principal Investigator at CQT working on quantum technology for nanosatellites, co-founding two spin-offs and coordinating community networks.”
This text is adapted from news published on the website of the Centre for Quantum Technologies. Read the original story here.
Image: Associate Professor Alexander Ling. Credit: CQT, NUS