UK’s STFC Launches 24 PLFLOPS AI Supercomputer for Industry

The UK’s Science and Technology Facilities Council’s (STFC) Hartree Centre has launched a supercomputer designed to help UK industry accelerate innovation through artificial intelligence and advanced computing.

A 24.41 petaflop system, it can perform 24.41 quadrillion floating-point calculations per second. The GPU-based system is designed for AI workloads and advanced visualisation.

Located within STFC’s £30 million supercomputing center at its Daresbury Laboratory, the system is named in honour of Mary Coombs, the UK’s first female commercial programmer.

From new medicines to climate prediction, it is deisnged to help UK businesses analyse vast datasets more quickly. It will turn cutting-edge research into real-world solutions faster, more efficiently and at greater scale, boosting productivity and growth across the UK economy, the orgnanization said.

Mary Coombs delivers 10 times the performance of its predecessor, Scafell Pike, while being more energy efficient.

The Hartree Centre at STFC’s Daresbury Laboratory, at Sci-Tech Daresbury in the Liverpool City Region, is the UK’s only supercomputing centre dedicated to working with industry.

Home to some of the UK’s leading experts in supercomputing, AI and data science, it helps businesses turn complex challenges and ideas into innovations that benefit the economy and society.

Professor Kate Royse, Director of the STFC Hartree Centre, said:

Here at the Hartree Centre, our new Mary Coombs supercomputer can provide UK industry with the computing power, expertise and skills needed to turn ambitious ideas into real-world solutions.

From drug discovery to climate research, businesses can process vast and complex datasets faster and more efficiently than ever before, without needing in-house supercomputing or AI expertise.

By giving industry access to world-class AI and high-performance computing, and to the leading skills of our Hartree Centre scientists, Mary Coombs can help businesses innovate with confidence, accelerate research, and bring solutions to market more quickly, delivering tangible benefits for our economy and society.

Paul Vernon, Head of STFC’s Daresbury Laboratory, said:

The launch of the STFC Supercomputing Centre and Mary Coombs marks an important milestone for UK innovation, giving businesses access to world-class tools and expertise to turn ideas into reality.

This new facility is an important national asset for research and innovation, strengthening the North West’s position as a hub for advanced technology, digital skills and high-value jobs.

By giving businesses the infrastructure to explore and apply advanced digital technologies, we’re helping to build a stronger, more innovative digital economy and ensuring the UK remains at the forefront of global research and development, driving growth and opportunity across the nation.

Steve Rotheram, Mayor of the Liverpool City Region, said:

When I speak to investors from the UK and beyond, they always sit up and pay attention when I tell them that the Liverpool City Region is at the heart of the UK’s advanced computing sector.

From cutting edge AI research to breakthroughs in health innovation and climate science, the impact of the pioneering work happening at Daresbury can be felt far beyond our region, and this new supercomputer will turbocharge those capabilities even further.

The new supercomputer forms part of the £210 million Hartree National Centre for Digital Innovation programme, a collaboration between STFC and IBM.

The launch of the new STFC Supercomputing Centre also supports the government’s AI Opportunities Action Plan.