Archer Materials Ltd Signs IonQ Quantum Compute Agreement for Australia
Archer signs Quantum Compute Agreement with global leader IonQ
Archer Materials (ASX: AXE) has signed a strategic Quantum Compute Agreement with IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ), the world’s leading quantum platform with a market capitalisation of approximately US$21 billion. The agreement, signed on 1 July 2026, provides Archer with access to the IonQ Quantum Cloud to develop quantum algorithms, applications and solutions.
The deal also sets up a collaboration to assess the future deployment of a sovereign IonQ quantum computer in Australia. Archer is uniquely positioned as the only ASX-listed company focused on quantum technologies, making this tie-up with a proven commercial quantum provider a notable step in its strategy.
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What the IonQ agreement delivers
Under the agreement, Archer gains access to the IonQ Quantum Cloud, described in the announcement as “the world’s most advanced computational system.” This access allows the Company to advance its proprietary quantum applications through software and algorithm development.
A specific example named in the announcement is Archer’s Quantum Machine Learning (QML) fraud detection program, which the Company intends to develop further using IonQ’s infrastructure. An IonQ specialist engineering team will support Archer across algorithm selection, evaluation and planning for future quantum systems.
The QML fraud detection program originated from Archer’s collaboration with CSIRO, which positioned quantum machine learning as a fourth technology vertical alongside the company’s quantum computing, sensing, and biochip platforms.
The commercial terms are clearly defined. The agreement carries an initial term of three years, renewable by mutual agreement between the two parties. Archer will pay IonQ US$250,000 on signing, followed by US$250,000 every six months thereafter, for a total commitment of US$1.5 million.
Access is provided on an IonQ Forte-class system and, once available, the IonQ Tempo-class system or subsequent systems. The arrangement also includes access to IonQ’s quantum simulator alongside expert advisory and consulting services.
| Term | Detail |
|---|---|
| Initial term | Three years, renewable by mutual agreement |
| Upfront payment | US$250,000 on signing |
| Ongoing payments | US$250,000 every six months |
| Total commitment | US$1.5 million |
| Systems accessed | IonQ Forte-class, then Tempo-class or subsequent systems, plus quantum simulator and advisory services |
Why IonQ matters as a partner
IonQ provides commercial quantum solutions to a roster of blue-chip organisations, including Air Force Research Lab, Hyundai, Airbus, AstraZeneca, and Lockheed Martin. Its strategic partnerships also extend to Amazon Web Services, Ansys and Google Cloud.
A notable performance proof point came in 2025, when IonQ, AWS, NVIDIA and AstraZeneca demonstrated a more than 20x improvement in computational performance relative to previous quantum solutions. In the same year, IonQ achieved 99.99% two-qubit gate fidelity, described in the announcement as a world record in quantum computing performance.
For investors, the significance is that Archer is plugging into a proven, commercially deployed platform backed by a roughly US$21 billion partner with established enterprise customers, rather than experimental technology still confined to research settings.
CEO Commentary
“Quantum compute power is no longer a horizon technology, but a strategically critical utility ready for commercial deployment,” said Dr Simon Ruffell, Chief Executive Officer of Archer.
Understanding sovereign quantum computing
A sovereign quantum computing capability refers to quantum compute infrastructure that is located and operated onshore within Australia. In practical terms, it means Australian organisations could access advanced quantum systems domestically rather than relying solely on infrastructure based overseas.
Data sovereignty matters most in confidentiality-sensitive sectors. According to Dr Ruffell, demand is particularly strong in areas where confidentiality and data sovereignty are paramount, such as banking and defence.
Connecting this to the agreement, Archer and IonQ will determine data centre suitability for a sovereign Australian IonQ quantum computer and engage customers across the corporate, government, research and education sectors. The announcement notes that establishing such a capability has the potential to support national priorities spanning AI, cybersecurity, defence, mining and resources, logistics, financial services, healthcare, advanced manufacturing and scientific research.
The investment case and market opportunity
The headline commercial figure is significant, though it carries an important qualifier. Upon successful completion of the agreement, Archer and IonQ intend to collaborate to establish a “cost effective, rapidly deployable sovereign utility-scale quantum capability” in Australia, opening up an annual $6B domestic market opportunity by 2045, according to the Australian Government National Quantum Strategy and the CSIRO / 2024 State of Australian Quantum report.
Archer’s differentiation rests on its status as the only ASX-listed company focused on quantum technologies. The agreement expands the Company’s quantum business offering and furthers its strategy of identifying and executing potential acquisitions and external intellectual property opportunities aligned with its quantum technology strategy.
The Archer Materials quantum computing strategy extends well beyond the IonQ partnership, with the company simultaneously targeting a Q3 2026 working qubit demonstration using its proprietary graphene-based 12CQ platform and advancing wafer-scale manufacturing runs with semiconductor fabrication partners.
The collaboration is structured around four stated objectives:
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Provide Australian enterprise customers with dedicated hours of IonQ compute time for next-generation application development.
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Build a customer base and sales pipeline to grow quantum adoption in Australia and prepare for post-quantum cyber security.
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Evaluate the onshoring of IonQ utility-scale computers in Australia, including assessing quantum computing and data centre infrastructure and partners.
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Support Archer to establish specialist sales and technical capabilities to commercialise quantum computing as a utility service (QaAU) in Australia.
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What comes next
The three-year initial term provides the runway for the collaboration to develop. The pathway is staged: cloud access and algorithm development come first, followed by assessment of data centre suitability, and then potential deployment of a sovereign IonQ quantum computer in Australia.
The announcement positions the agreement as a significant step in Archer’s strategy to establish sovereign quantum computing capability in Australia. Notably, these remain stated intentions and objectives rather than committed deployments, with the parties intending to collaborate, assess and evaluate as the agreement progresses.
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