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European Tech Sovereignty
3JUN

Onwurah: DSIT has no coherent strategy

3 min read
10:43UTC

Chi Onwurah, who chairs the Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee, published correspondence with DSIT minister Kanishka Narayan in which she said his sovereignty letter fails to set out a coherent strategy.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The SIT Committee chair has told DSIT in print that its sovereignty strategy is not yet a strategy.

Chi Onwurah, the Member of Parliament for Newcastle upon Tyne Central and chair of the Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee, published correspondence with Kanishka Narayan, minister at the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT), in which she writes that his sovereignty letter "fails to set out a coherent strategy for achieving technology sovereignty" 1. Narayan pointed to the £500 million Sovereign AI Unit (SAIU), launched in April , and a proposed "advanced market commitment" for AI hardware as the government's strategy.

The SAIU's first cohort, named on 16 April, was exclusively infrastructure-layer ; no second cohort has been announced. Narayan's "advanced market commitment" is, on Computer Weekly's reading, a phrase rather than a published policy instrument. The Open Rights Group's national security report, which put the UK's annual cloud lock-in cost to US hyperscalers at £500 million , already framed the sovereignty problem as one of demand-side capture, not capital. The SAIU's £500 million sits on the supply side.

The immediate political pressure is now on DSIT to expand beyond the seven first-cohort firms. The committee chair has put the minister on record. Across the Channel, the comparable European pressure is the seven-CEO Handelsblatt op-ed urging Brussels to deregulate, and OpenAI's decision to pause Stargate UK on energy costs while it signed an 88,500 square foot lease at King's Cross. Onwurah's letter does not name those data points. The next SAIU cohort, if it lands, will determine whether the UK's sovereignty strategy includes anything above the chip and the data-centre.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Chi Onwurah is a Labour MP who chairs the committee in the UK Parliament that scrutinises the government's science and technology policy. She wrote to Kanishka Narayan, the minister responsible, saying the government's plan for 'technology sovereignty' (being less dependent on US and Chinese tech companies) does not actually explain how it will be achieved. Narayan pointed to the £500m Sovereign AI Unit, a fund set up in April 2026, and a proposed financial mechanism called an 'advanced market commitment' for AI hardware. The exchange matters because the UK is outside the EU and cannot benefit from the EU's €20bn chip investment or its procurement preferences for European tech. The £500m fund is roughly 40 times smaller than the EU's equivalent spending over the same period, so critics argue it is a political announcement rather than a genuine strategy.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The UK's post-Brexit position means it operates outside the EU's Digital Single Market, the EU AI Act framework, and the Chips Act investment pool simultaneously.

This creates a three-gap problem: no access to the EU's procurement-preference market, no access to EU-funded chip production, and no coverage by the EU's GPAI (general-purpose AI) enforcement regime that at least provides regulatory clarity. DSIT is trying to fill all three gaps with a single £500m unit that is smaller than the EU's Digital Europe Programme quarterly allocation.

The 'advanced market commitment' mechanism for AI hardware that Narayan cited has no published design. Advanced market commitments work in pharmaceuticals (GAVI vaccine guarantee) because the product specification is fixed and the buyer is a government. AI hardware is neither: the compute stack changes every 18 months and UK government procurement is not a large enough market to anchor an AMC at meaningful scale without US or EU co-investment.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If the Sovereign AI Unit cannot publish measurable output metrics before the next Select Committee hearing, Onwurah's framing that DSIT lacks a coherent strategy becomes the dominant parliamentary narrative, reducing ministerial authority to resist further scrutiny or to attract private co-investment.

  • Consequence

    The published correspondence becomes a permanent part of the parliamentary record and will be cited by opposition MPs in any future AI procurement controversy, regardless of whether DSIT subsequently produces a more detailed strategy document.

First Reported In

Update #4 · CISPE moves first; Brussels misses again

European Commission· 7 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Onwurah: DSIT has no coherent strategy
Three weeks after the £500m Sovereign AI Unit named its first cohort, the parliamentary committee that scrutinises it is on the public record saying DSIT cannot describe its own approach.
Different Perspectives
European Central Bank
European Central Bank
The ECB's digital euro pilot drew more than 50 PSP applications and is naming 10 to 30 participants in July, advancing on its own monetary mandate without requiring a Commission act. Its trajectory this week is the inverse of CAIDA's: the sovereignty instrument that restricts no US firm is the only one keeping its published calendar.
United States (Ambassador Andrew Puzder / Steptoe LLP)
United States (Ambassador Andrew Puzder / Steptoe LLP)
Puzder named CAIDA a red line inconsistent with the EU-US trade framework on 25 May; Steptoe warns US firms spend up to USD 50bn a year on DMA and DSA compliance and that CAIDA's Buy European tilt threatens the Turnberry truce. The Google fine delay is read in Washington as evidence that Commission enforcement bends to diplomatic pressure.
France (G7 chair and Mistral AI)
France (G7 chair and Mistral AI)
France chaired the 29 May G7 Bercy ministerial and produced a communique that omitted cloud sovereignty entirely, while its national AI champion Mistral won five-year Airbus and BMW engineering contracts commercially the day before. Paris is advancing sovereignty through the market and retreating on it at every multilateral table.
Germany (federal government)
Germany (federal government)
Berlin maintained College silence that forced CAIDA's scope to public-sector tenders, protecting the automotive sector from a US Section 301 claim while simultaneously allowing BMW to contract Mistral for safety-critical crash-simulation work. German corporate procurement and German trade policy are running in opposite directions.
Netherlands (minister Willemijn Aerdts)
Netherlands (minister Willemijn Aerdts)
Aerdts blocked Kyndryl's EUR 100m Solvinity acquisition on 26 May, the first US deal ever stopped under Dutch screening, on the specific ground that the US CLOUD Act could compel disclosure of DigiD and MijnOverheid data. The decision is a direct demonstration that national screening achieves CAIDA's public-sector objective without waiting for EU law.
European Commission
European Commission
The Commission is presenting CAIDA adoption on its fourth scheduled date as a sovereignty milestone, with Henna Virkkunen due to brief the Telecom Council on 9 June. The narrowed public-sector-only scope is the concession written in to secure adoption; whether the Commission presents it as a floor or a ceiling for future revision is the open question.