Quantum Technologies hold great economic potential. That is why it is in Europe’s interest to secure a leading position in their development and industrial application.
The French German Dialogue of Quantum Technology Players on September 23, 2025 in Paris and Massy (France), was organized by the Quantum Technology and Application Consortium (QUTAC), Le lab Quantique, Quandela, CEA, Fraunhofer, with support from the French embassy in Germany and the German embassy in France. The dialogue brought together more than 60 experts, managers and decision-makers from innovation, corporates, research and public authorities from France and Germany.
Following the dialogue, participants identified the following key challenges for building Europe’s quantum future:
- Use Cases: A concrete, industry-driven pipeline of end-to-end use cases should be developed, aligned with realistic expectations and a clear definition of what constitutes a “quantum advantage”.
- Success Stories: Successful examples that translate scientific achievements into businesses cases with tangible return on investment and operational impact should act as references across sectors.
- Benchmarking and management of expectations: A focus should be given to benchmarking our progress toward error-corrected and fault-tolerant systems. These will determine the long-term viability and sovereignty of European quantum technologies.
- European champions: Champions at the European level should be nurtured to build scale and reduce fragmentation, all while connecting national strengths, particularly in strategic domains.
- Trust / Intellectual Property: Intellectual property rules in both countries should be clarified and harmonized, while patents should continue to be incentivized.
- European strategies: Joint roadmaps and funding strategies should be developed across countries to avoid duplicating efforts and promote shared projects with long-term impact.
- Funding: Investment funds and private capital should be mobilised to stimulate industrial co-development and adoption of quantum solutions. Public funding programs should expand, and public authorities and funding agencies should streamline cross-border funding through a single-entry point.
- Talents: Talent training should be prioritised, for example by developing shared talent platforms and joint doctoral schools and study schemes.
- Gathering of ecosystems among France and Germany: Creative formats of collaboration across countries should be developed, such as cross invitations at meetings, events, technology fairs, dedicated learning expeditions, and others.
- Dialogue governance: The Franco-German dialogue of quantum technology players should be followed up and expanded. Governance mechanisms should be supported jointly by France and Germany to ensure continuity, coordination, accountability, alignment with national strategies and dissemination of results and increased impact.
To master these challenges, participants have formulated concrete actions. You can find these in the complete version of our conclusion document, which you can download here

