Britain has unveiled a £1.1 billion ($1.47 billion) AI hardware strategy, including a national supercomputer, support for domestic chipmakers and new venture funding, as it seeks to strengthen sovereign computing capabilities and reduce reliance on foreign technology
Britain announced a £1.1 billion ($1.47 billion) investment plan aimed at strengthening its domestic artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure, as the government seeks to reduce dependence on foreign technology providers and build sovereign computing capabilities.
The initiative, dubbed the AI Hardware Plan, was unveiled during London Tech Week and includes funding for a national AI supercomputer, support for homegrown chipmakers, venture capital backing for AI hardware startups and programmes to develop specialist skills in the sector.
The announcement comes as countries around the world race to secure access to advanced computing power and semiconductors, which are increasingly viewed as strategic assets underpinning economic growth, technological competitiveness and national security.
The new package builds on a £400 million commitment announced earlier in the day by Prime Minister Keir Starmer for specialist AI chip purchases, part of a broader effort to strengthen Britain’s computing infrastructure.
National AI supercomputer
A key pillar of the plan is a £750 million national AI supercomputer scheduled to come online by 2030. The system will use a combination of established and next-generation processors, giving British researchers and companies greater access to high-performance computing resources.
Of the supercomputer budget, £400 million will be allocated to next-generation chips. This includes £150 million earmarked for inference chips that the government plans to purchase from British companies later this year.
Officials say the investment is intended to ensure that UK-based AI developers can access computing power domestically rather than relying heavily on foreign cloud providers and overseas infrastructure.
The move reflects growing concern among policymakers that access to advanced chips and computing resources is becoming concentrated among a handful of companies and countries, particularly the United States.
Backing domestic chipmakers
The government also announced a £120 million AI hardware innovation programme to help British companies design, develop and test new semiconductor technologies.
In addition, a new investment fund led by U.S. venture capital firm Playground Global will receive backing of up to £150 million from the British Business Bank to invest in UK AI hardware businesses.
The British Business Bank said the commitment represents the largest single fund investment in its history.
As part of the partnership, Playground Global will establish its first office outside the United States in Britain, providing UK startups with greater access to international capital and industry expertise.
Focus on sovereign technology
The government’s latest push underscores a broader shift in AI policy from supporting software development alone to investing in the underlying hardware that powers AI systems.
While Britain has produced leading AI research institutions and startups, policymakers have increasingly highlighted the need to strengthen domestic capabilities in semiconductors and advanced computing infrastructure.
The strategy is designed to help ensure that British innovators can develop and deploy AI technologies without becoming overly dependent on foreign suppliers for critical hardware.
The investment also aligns with wider efforts by governments across Europe, North America and Asia to secure domestic supply chains for advanced technologies amid intensifying geopolitical competition over chips and AI.
Skills and workforce development
Alongside infrastructure and investment measures, the government announced £45 million in new funding for AI hardware skills development, taking total government support for sector-specific training initiatives to £80 million.
Officials said the funding will help address talent shortages in semiconductor engineering, chip design and related fields, which have emerged as key bottlenecks for the industry’s growth.
Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said the package would help position Britain as a leading destination for AI innovation while ensuring that the country develops greater control over the hardware foundations of the technology.
First Published:
June 09, 2026, 11:48 IST
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