NCI Australia and the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre have joined the US-led COVID-19 High Performance Computing (HPC) Consortium.

Joining the esteemed group as a Collaborating Initiative, known as the ’Australian HPC COVID-19 Rapid Response (NCI Australia and Pawsey Supercomputing Centre)’, the Australian research facilities join the European Union’s PRACE as an international affiliated initiative.

The Consortium is a unique private-public effort spearheaded by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, the U.S. Department of Energy and IBM to bring together government, industry and academic leaders who are volunteering free compute time and resources on their world-class machines.

In April 2020 the two Australian HPC Centres joined efforts to open a rapid response call for COVID-19 researchers. Time is being made available on the Southern Hemisphere’s fastest supercomputer, NCI’s Gadi housed at The Australian National University, and Pawsey’s newly deployed cloud infrastructure, Nimbus, managed by Australia’s national science agency – CSIRO.

Supported by the Australian Government, four teams from across Australia are accessing 40 million hours of compute time on NCI’s state-of-the-art Gadi, along with five teams accessing multifunctional cloud capabilities using Pawsey’s Nimbus.

Projects of this scale would not be possible in Australia without the computer power available at the Tier-1 facilities.

The collaboration between the two centres and their newly commissioned infrastructure was key in enabling these projects rapid access to large-scale allocations.  

“Pawsey’s collaboration with NCI brings Australian supercomputing expertise and infrastructure together to support advanced analysis and simulation, accelerating the work of our national research organisations and their partners.

“Australian government investment in both centres is vital to our efforts and supports both centres in joining this international HPC consortium,” said Pawsey Executive Director Mark Stickells.

"For decades supercomputing has enabled Australian scientists to tackle the greatest problems. Vaccine investigations and protein analysis have formed part of NCI's history, laying the groundwork for some of our major research user groups to rapidly pivot in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The value of the national computational infrastructure at NCI and Pawsey to support this research is clear as we harness our knowledge and experience to look for new answers," said NCI Director Professor Sean Smith.