The Lithuanian Quantum Technologies Association (Quantum Lithuania) publicly presented the Lithuanian Quantum Technologies Agenda on February 28, 2025, at the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences in Vilnius. The event drew over 100 attendees from science, business, and the public sector. A working group of more than 30 experts from scientific institutes, universities, ministries, businesses, and government organizations drafted the document.
According to a NordForsk report, the agenda spans from 2025 to 2035 and is a community-driven proposal rather than an officially approved government strategy. It projects that €65 million in national funding would be required through 2035 to support research, infrastructure, commercialization, and talent development in quantum technologies.
Key proposals in the agenda include the establishment of a national quantum technologies program, a dedicated Quantum Hub, integration of quantum content into higher education curricula, enhancement of high-performance computing infrastructure for hybrid quantum-classical computing, and increased involvement in EU and NATO quantum initiatives. The agenda focuses on four core pillars: quantum computing, quantum simulation, quantum communication, and quantum sensing and metrology. Prof. Dr. Mantas Šimėnas presented the agenda, with closing remarks from Paulius Petrauskas, an advisor to the Minister of Economy and Innovation.