The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), the UK's main public funder of engineering and physical sciences, launched two AI research labs on Tuesday 23 June and doubled the programme behind them to £60m, with AI Minister Kanishka Narayan making the announcement 1. The SOFAIR Lab at University College London will develop open-source AI that runs on commodity hardware, the ordinary chips anyone can buy, cutting dependence on a handful of model providers. The BOLD Lab at Oxford will work on new learning algorithms and embodied AI, the software that runs robots. Each lab gets around £8m to start and £2m for at least ten doctoral students, with an autumn review deciding further tranches.
SOFAIR's mandate quietly cuts against the rest of government policy. DSIT, the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, is spending £1.1bn on an AI Hardware Plan built around frontier chips and large model providers, with the US firm Playground Global running its £150m chip vehicle. EPSRC is funding the opposite hedge: AI designed to work without that infrastructure. The european-tech-sovereignty topic owns the frontier-policy analysis; the angle here is that the state is funding both sides of its own bet, and neither plan acknowledges the other.
The same anti-dependency reflex named five British AI-hardware startups at RUSI, the Royal United Services Institute defence think tank , and pushed Oriole Networks' photonic interconnect into deployment through ARIA, the Advanced Research and Invention Agency . SOFAIR carries that logic into the research base, assuming the expensive infrastructure might not arrive. BOLD's robotics pillar is the longer bet, a pipeline for the embodied-AI spinouts Britain does not yet have.
