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Callosum
OrganisationGB

Callosum

Cambridge AI startup; first equity investment from the UK Sovereign AI Unit, named 16 April 2026.

Last refreshed: 22 April 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics

Key Question

Why did the UK Sovereign AI Unit hand Callosum the only equity cheque in its first cohort?

Timeline for Callosum

#216 Apr

Received direct equity stake from the UK Sovereign AI Fund

European Tech Sovereignty: UK names first Sovereign AI investees
#316 Apr

Named as Sovereign AI Unit investee for multi-model interoperability infrastructure

European Tech Sovereignty: Kendall names seven infrastructure bets for £500m Sovereign AI Unit
View full timeline →
Common Questions
Why did the UK Sovereign AI Unit pick Callosum first?
Callosum received the only direct equity stake in the SAIU's first cohort because its chip-optimisation software addresses a foundational sovereignty problem: enabling mixed silicon fleets to interoperate without vendor lock-in.Source: DSIT / Lowdown
What does Callosum AI do?
Callosum builds software enabling diverse chip architectures — Nvidia, AMD, Intel, and others — to interoperate, reducing AI vendor lock-in across heterogeneous silicon fleets.Source: UK DSIT 16 April 2026
Who are the founders of Callosum?
Danyal Akarca and Jascha Achterberg, both Cambridge PhD graduates.Source: UK DSIT 16 April 2026
What is chip interoperability and why does it matter for AI sovereignty?
Chip interoperability means AI workloads can run across different hardware vendors without rewriting code. It matters because European AI sovereignty requires non-US silicon options to be viable at scale.Source: UK DSIT 16 April 2026

Background

Callosum became the first equity investment from the Sovereign AI Unit (SAIU) when DSIT named its inaugural cohort on 16 April 2026 . The direct equity stake, unique among the seven first-cohort firms, marks Callosum out as the programme's highest-confidence bet: six other companies received compute access via the AI Research Resource, but only Callosum received a capital cheque. Callosum was founded by Cambridge PhD graduates Danyal Akarca and Jascha Achterberg to build chip-optimisation software enabling heterogeneous silicon fleets to interoperate .

The chip-interoperability problem Callosum addresses is structural to European AI sovereignty. European data centres and research facilities increasingly run mixed fleets of Nvidia, AMD, Intel, and emerging European silicon. Without software that abstracts across architectures, workloads remain sticky to individual vendors, reproducing the lock-in that European sovereign cloud policy aims to eliminate.

Callosum's equity backing positions it as an infrastructure layer below the model tier: if Cosine, Prima Mente, and the other SAIU investees are building British AI applications, Callosum is building the plumbing that lets those applications run on non-US silicon. The SAIU's naming at Wayve's London HQ, one day after Wayve closed a m Series D extension, underscored that the Sovereign AI label is as much a hardware-alliance endorsement as a sector bet.