The Register reported on 20 April 2026 that London hosts 80% of UK AI datacentre capacity but Slough, the West London town that has been Europe's largest datacentre cluster since the 2010s, has reached saturation with 35 facilities and an exhausted grid. 1 UK commercial electricity runs at roughly four times US equivalents per International Energy Agency comparison data, and the AI Growth Zones programme is directing new capacity toward Scotland and northern England where wind generation is abundant and planning cycles are shorter.
Datacentres are the physical plant of the AI economy: buildings full of servers drawing 50-100MW each and needing dedicated grid connections, cooling water, and fibre backhaul. A single Nscale-scale build consumes as much electricity as a small town, and the National Grid connection queue for large industrial loads currently sits on planning horizons of a decade or more in the South East. The British Industrial Competitiveness Scheme, published in the Industrial Strategy Quarterly Update on 9 April, cuts electricity bills by up to 25% for qualifying manufacturers. 2 Hyperscalers are mostly excluded from that eligibility; the scheme is scoped to manufacturing, not compute.
Pulsant's CMO framed the new logic: "Start with the workload, the latency tolerance and the power profile, then choose the geography." AI inference tolerates roughly 20-millisecond latency where high-frequency trading does not; the workload's latency budget is what makes geographic dispersal physically possible. A 50MW facility in Scotland beats the same facility in Slough on unit economics before the lease is signed, provided the grid connection can be secured in commercial time.
The binding constraint is upstream of both the AI Growth Zones push and the competitiveness scheme's 25% discount. Nscale's $2bn build-out and SAIU's compute commitments both depend on grid connections the National Grid queue has not yet cleared, and transmission upgrades sitting on decade-long planning horizons. The state has named the companies and gestured toward the geography; whether the electrons arrive on time is a DESNZ and National Grid problem that policy on the electricity bill cannot solve. The first rejected datacentre planning application or refused grid connection in Slough will be the trigger moment that tests the AI Growth Zone thesis in practice.
