UK unveils £500m Sovereign AI unit to turn research into global tech companies

The UK government has launched a £500 million Sovereign AI Unit designed to turn the country’s artificial intelligence research into commercially successful companies, combining direct equity investment with access to state-backed computing power.
Announcing the initiative on Thursday at the London headquarters of self-driving car company Wayve, Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said AI would be central to both the UK’s economy and its security.
“If we believe AI is absolutely critical to our economic prosperity and our national security, which I do, then this fund is one of the single most important things this government will do for the future of this country,” she told an audience of investors, founders and policymakers.
The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology described AI as “the most important technology of our era” and said the UK must be a creator of AI systems rather than a passive consumer. Officials cast the unit as a response to a persistent gap in Britain’s tech sector: translating world-class research into scalable businesses with the capital and infrastructure to compete internationally.
“Sovereign AI is designed to close that gap,” the department said. The unit will operate with a venture capital-style model, investing directly in promising startups while opening access to advanced computing through the government-backed AI Research Resource (AIRR) supercomputer network.
Its first equity investment is in Callosum, a company developing next-generation AI infrastructure. Six additional startups — Prima Mente, Cosine, Cursive, Doubleword, Twig Bio and Odyssey — will receive high-performance compute via AIRR, with the government retaining the option to invest in them later.
Ministers say these firms are working on technologies with potential real-world impact, including treatments for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, advanced AI systems and semiconductor innovations. Officials said the Sovereign AI Unit is in discussions with around 30 further companies, signalling additional investment rounds in the coming months.
Alongside the equity component, the package includes a £282 million programme for research and development, including the creation of new datasets to accelerate innovation. The UK’s AI sector has expanded rapidly, with startups raising £6 billion in venture capital last year; in the first three months of 2026, companies secured more than half that amount.
Industry reaction was broadly supportive. Alex Kendall, chief executive of Wayve, said the initiative would help emerging companies scale and attract talent, adding that it should bolster the UK’s growing AI ecosystem. Analysts framed the move within intensifying global competition from the US and China, which dominate large-scale models and computing infrastructure.
“The Sovereign AI fund is not about matching US or Chinese scale, but about securing control over the foundations AI depends on, particularly compute, data and infrastructure,” said Amine Abidi, a senior partner at consultancy Kearney.
He added that the UK’s success would depend less on headline funding figures and more on execution, particularly in building domestic capacity for AI development and deployment, with strengths in areas such as autonomous systems and speech AI.
The government’s approach focuses on targeted investments where officials say the UK can compete effectively — especially in data, infrastructure and specialised applications — with further company selections and AIRR access expected as the unit’s pipeline advances.
