The UK announced a £1.1bn AI Hardware Plan at London Tech Week on Monday 8 June, set out by Science Secretary Liz Kendall 1. The money splits three ways: £750m for a national AI supercomputer due to run from 2030, £400m for advanced chip purchasing, and roughly £120m to seed startup hardware, including a £150m advance commitment to buy novel chips from British firms through a British Business Bank vehicle. Kendall called AI "the defining currency of economic and hard power in today's world" 2.
This is the inverse of the EU's alliance-buy model. Where Brussels pledged to purchase US silicon, London is trying to manufacture domestic demand by guaranteeing itself as a customer for British startup chips. Counting the £500m Sovereign AI Unit , the £250m cloud procurement and this plan, UK sovereign-AI spending has reached about £1.85bn in eight weeks, with the second Sovereign AI wave closing on 5 June .
OpenAI paused its Stargate UK compute build over energy costs and grid connection queues , and any national supercomputer due in 2030 meets the same queue. A guaranteed customer can pull a chip startup through its first orders, but it cannot conjure a grid connection the network operator has not scheduled. The demand-side bet and the EU's supply-side alliance both leave that bottleneck untouched.
