European High-Performance Computing Joint Undertaking


The European High-Performance Computing Joint Undertaking is a public-private partnership in High Performance Computing, enabling the pooling of European Union -level resources with the resources of participating EU Member States and participating associated states of the Horizon 2020 programme, as well as private stakeholders. The Joint Undertaking has the twin stated aims of developing a pan-European supercomputing infrastructure, and supporting research and innovation activities. Located in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg, the Joint Undertaking started operating in November 2018 and will remain operational until the end of 2026.

History

In June 2016, EU Member State leaders, meeting in the European Council called for greater coordination of EU efforts on high-performance computing as part of the EU's wider Digital Single Market strategy. The European Declaration on High-Performance Computing was launched in Rome in March 2017, initially signed by seven EU Member States committed to upgrading European computing power. In June 2018, the Council of the EU endorsed the European Commission’s proposal to establish the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking. On 3 July 2018, the European Parliament voted in favour of the Commission’s proposal to create a European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking. The proposal was formally adopted by the Council of the European Union on 28 September 2018.

Funding and objectives

The Joint Undertaking will have a budget of €1 billion, half from the EU budget and half from participating states. Additional resources to the value of over €400 million will come from private partners.
The EuroHPC JU has the twin objectives of;
In June 2019, the EuroHPC JU governing board selected 8 sites for supercomputing centres located in 8 different EU Member States to host the new high-performance computing machines. The hosting sites will be located in Sofia, Ostrava, Kajaani, Bologna, Bissen, Minho, Maribor, and Barcelona. 3 of the 8 sites will host precursor to exascale machines that will be in the global top 5 supercomputers, and 5 petascale machines.
The precursor to exascale systems are expected to provide 4-5 times more computing power than the current top supercomputing systems of the Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe. Together with the petascale systems, they will double the supercomputing resources available for European-level use, meaning that many more users will have access to them. All the new supercomputers will be connected to the GEANT high-speed pan-European network, like the existing supercomputers that are part of PRACE.

Members

The EuroHPC Joint Undertaking is composed of public and private members.

Public members

As of January 2020, public members of the Joint Undertaking include, the European Union, 26 of the 27 EU Member States, and five non-EU associated states of the EU's Horizon 2020 programme.
Other EU Member States or countries associated to Horizon 2020 are able to become members, provided that they accept the Statutes and financially contribute to the achievement of the objectives of the Joint Undertaking.

Observer states

has been given "observer" status for the EuroHPC JU, allowing it to participate in deliberations of the Governing Board, but not receive a vote. The United Kingdom lost its observer status following its departure from the EU on 31 January 2020.

Private members

The Joint Undertaking's private members include the European Technology Platform for High Performance Computing and the Big Data Value associations. Any legal entity established in a Member State or country associated to Horizon 2020 that supports research and innovation may apply to become a private member of the Joint Undertaking.

Governance

There are three bodies in the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking:

Governing board

The governing board is composed of representatives of the EU and participating states. The European Commission and each participating state appoint one representative in the Governing Board. Each representative may be accompanied by one expert. The EU holds 50% of the voting rights through the European Commission representative. The rest of the voting rights are distributed among the participating states according to the following lines;
The industrial and scientific advisory board consists of two Groups which provide independent advice to the Governing Board;
The executive director is the chief executive responsible for day-to-day management of the Joint Undertaking.

Headquarters

The EuroHPC Joint Undertaking is headquartered in the Euroforum building, owned by the European Commission, in the Luxembourg City quarter of Gasperich, Luxembourg. The site forms part of the Cloche D'or urban development scheme. The EuroHPC JU shares its headquarters with, amongst other European Commission bodies, the Euratom Supply Agency.