New national supercomputer CASPIr to be operated by University of Galway

0
112
Galway Daily news Galway to house new European supercomputer

University of Galway is to host Ireland’s new supercomputer, following a collaboration agreement by the Government and the European Commission.

The national high-performance computing system – CASPIr – will be operated by the University’s Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC).

It will provide the research and innovation community across Ireland and Europe with significantly enhanced capacity to address challenges and opportunities in science and society, such as climate, environment, health, AI and big data.

CASPIr will be co-funded by the Department for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science and European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) as part of a five-year collaboration agreement.

Professor David Burn, President of University of Galway, said, “The collaboration agreement for the new supercomputer CASPIr heralds a new era of research capability for Europe, and Ireland’s research community, and places University of Galway and our Irish Centre for High-End Computing at the helm of data driven study.”

“I would like to thank Minister Lawless and his team in the Department for pursuing this investment and working with University of Galway to secure it.”

“We can now look forward to the research community reaping the rewards of this next generation of supercomputing and data driven research as it drives University of Galway’s strategic focus on transformative data and AI to support interdisciplinary research addressing global challenges.”

CASPIr follows on from the supercomputer Kay, which was commissioned in 2018.

It is one of 31 supercomputers in Europe which are funded under the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking. It is planned to be in service in 2027. CASPIr takes its name from Computational Analysis and Simulation Platform for Ireland.

ICHEC is hosted at University of Galway and funded by the Department of Further and Higher, Education, Research, Innovation and Science.

It is Ireland’s national centre for high-performance computing, providing e-infrastructure, services and expertise to the academic research community, industry and the public sector.

Its high-performance computing services are made available to researchers based on a peer review process by an independent panel of scientists.

Dr Michael Nolan, Chair of the ICHEC Science Council said, “CASPIr will enable the Irish research community to take leading roles in research consortia, international research programmes and attract industry investment that is built on the ability to integrate computational methods into R&D, alongside helping to deliver on government ambition.”