Nvidia has revealed a major investment of up to £11 billion into the UK’s AI ecosystem. This project aims to create the largest GPU cluster in Europe by 2026, utilising 120,000 of Nvidia’s most recent Blackwell Ultra chips in new data centres. The announcement coincided with the state visit to the UK by former President Donald Trump, underlining the strategic significance of this investment in enhancing Britain’s standing in the global AI arena.
The top chip manufacturer is partnering with entities such as Microsoft, CoreWeave, and the UK-based Nscale to enhance the nation’s sovereign compute capacity, which is essential for national competitiveness. David Hogan, Nvidia’s Vice President for Enterprise EMEA, labelled this as the most substantial technology investment in the UK thus far, stressing the deployment of 60,000 GPUs within the UK as part of a global rollout of 300,000.
Hogan pointed out that AI is an essential form of national infrastructure, comparable to energy and telecommunications. He indicated that Nvidia is transitioning from merely a chip designer to a full-scale provider of ‘AI factories’, which amalgamate hardware, networking, and software to fuel the next industrial revolution. These facilities are intended to enable UK researchers and developers to perform cutting-edge research.
This announcement comes after a commitment made by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang during London Tech Week, where Huang acknowledged the UK’s AI potential but noted the absence of sovereign compute infrastructure. Trump’s visit paved the way for this influx of investment, featuring notable appearances from Huang and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Google also announced a £5 billion expansion of its UK cloud infrastructure.
Nscale will introduce 60,000 of Nvidia’s Grace Blackwell GPUs to the UK, contributing to a global total of 300,000 units. This collaboration with OpenAI will create ‘Stargate UK’, a data centre cluster that will support models like GPT-5. At the same time, Microsoft and Nscale are set to build what is referred to as the UK’s most powerful supercomputer in Loughton, using 24,000 GPUs for Azure services.
Hogan emphasized the UK’s capacity to merge capital, policy, and infrastructure, calling it a ‘Goldilocks opportunity’ for swift AI growth and innovation. He mentioned that Nvidia’s investment in AI infrastructure will foster sustainable economic growth throughout the UK. The £11 billion investment covers not only chip orders but also the land, power, and operations required for new data centres.
Despite these initiatives, the UK lags behind the US and the Middle East in terms of scale. OpenAI’s Stargate project, supported by Oracle, plans to deploy two million GPUs in the US, while Meta and Elon Musk’s xAI are also rapidly expanding. The UAE is said to be seeking licenses to import 500,000 Nvidia GPUs each year. Nevertheless, Hogan expressed assurance that the UK’s strategy, which includes a newly announced ‘AI growth zone’ for faster data centre development, will establish Britain as Europe’s foremost AI powerhouse.
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