McGill, IBM develop Quebec’s most powerful and energy-efficient supercomputer cluster

At an event at Montreal’s École de technologie supérieure (ÉTS) on Tuesday, June 14, McGill unveiled Quebec’s largest computer cluster. In an $8.3-million CDN agreement with IBM in Canada, the University has acquired a supercomputer cluster able to support the data-intensive research activities of the CLUMEQ High Performance Computing Consortium, making it the most powerful supercomputer in Quebec and the second-most energy-efficient data centre in Canada.
Luc Castonguay of Quebec's Ministère du Développement économique, Innovation et Exportation, flanked by Prof. Peter Grutter, Associate Dean of Research and Graduate Education at McGill, at the the McGill CLUMEQ supercomputer cluster acquisition announcement earlier this week. / Photo: Lino Cipresso

By McGill Reporter Staff

At an event at Montreal’s École de technologie supérieure (ÉTS) on Tuesday, June 14, McGill unveiled Quebec’s largest computer cluster.

In an $8.3-million CDN agreement with IBM in Canada, the University has acquired a supercomputer cluster able to support the data-intensive research activities of the CLUMEQ High Performance Computing Consortium, making it the most powerful supercomputer in Quebec and the second-most energy-efficient data centre in Canada.

The first phase of this McGill project, funded by the Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI), aims at building Canada’s capacity to undertake world-class research and technology development to strengthen its position in today’s knowledge economy. According to a recent report issued by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, the province of Quebec is a hotbed of research and development, making the city of Montreal an ideal location for the project

Gaining an efficient, relevant understanding of mountains of data will be one of the biggest challenges for organizations in the 21st Century. McGill’s CLUMEQ will provide high-performance computing (HPC) capabilities to fully support the research activities of the Quebec and Canadian university communities in several data-intensive sectors. McGill’s focus includes high-energy physics, nanotechnologies, computational fluid dynamics, climate research, brain imaging, biology and life sciences. The cluster will leverage the processing power necessary to facilitate the efficient capture, storage, search, sharing, analysis, and visualization of vast amounts of industry data. CLUMEQ will also support the Atlas research project linked to the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) project.

″With these impressive, multidisciplinary computing capacities, the new theories tested by the McGill CLUMEQ consortium will have a major impact on many areas of scientific expertise, from research into the Big Bang to advances in nano-scale materials, as well as industries in key fields such as neuroscience, biopharma, aerospace, and finance,” said McGill’s Principal and Vice-Chancellor Heather Munroe-Blum. “We appreciate the strong support we have received from the federal and provincial governments, and from our IBM partner, which helps us to foster innovation and discovery within our university communities and to conduct transformational research for the continued advancement of society.”

Founded in 2001, CLUMEQ is a supercomputer consortium network created with McGill University, Université Laval and the Université du Québec network, which includes the École de technologie supérieure (ÉTS), where the supercomputer is housed. McGill’s CLUMEQ is part of the National Platform infrastructure meant to support researchers all over the country.

“McGill’s CLUMEQ is poised to be a game-changer to help accelerate Canadian research innovation,” said Denis Desbiens, IBM Quebec Vice-President at IBM Canada. “With IBM’s expertise, the consortium – part of Calcul Québec – is now one of the seven components of the national HPC platform set up by Compute Canada to serve Canadian researchers. “Cutting-edge research in a variety of disciplines is what McGill CLUMEQ will bring.”

IBM, which celebrates its centennial this year, began co-operating on McGill’s supercomputer initiative in 2005. It has provided McGill researchers continuous support on this initiative.

The new supercomputer, based on IBM’s iDataPlex solution, has received contributions from both levels of governments in addition to IBM’s participation as part of its industrial regional benefits