OpenAI paused its planned UK Stargate data centre at Cobalt Park, North Tyneside, on 23 April 2026, citing what the company described as an "unfavourable regulatory environment" and elevated energy costs. 1 The Blackstone and Nscale components of the wider AI Growth Zone build continue unaffected.
Stargate UK is the British arm of the $500 billion Stargate programme, the joint OpenAI–Oracle–SoftBank AI infrastructure venture announced at the White House in January 2025. The AI Growth Zone is the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) programme designating priority sites for accelerated grid connection and planning consent. Cobalt Park, a brownfield business park north of the Tyne, was named as the flagship North East AI Growth Zone site by the UK government in early 2026.
The "unfavourable regulatory environment" phrase points at a specific stack of UK pressures rather than a single decision. The grid-connection register at NESO, the UK system operator, holds applicants in a queue that runs years long for new connections of this size. Ofgem's AI-demand consultation, the document UK grid analysts treat as the most consequential of the year, is still pending. UK industrial electricity prices are the highest in the G7. Operators with global site portfolios can route capex to jurisdictions that price and consent faster.
The pause matters because it lands in the same week the IEA's headline figures restated the demand trajectory in maximalist terms. The contrast is the editorial fact: capex is being raised globally and a flagship project pauses locally on the same Wednesday. Blackstone's Blyth campus and Nscale's components proceeding does not soften the signal; it sharpens it. Capital is still flowing, but it is becoming choosier about where it lands, and OpenAI has just told the UK market that Cobalt Park, on current rules, is not the right address.
