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Nvidia CEO invests £500M in UK cloud firm, calls Britain future AI superpower
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced a £500 million investment in British cloud computing firm NScale, declaring that “the UK is going to be an AI superpower.” The investment comes as part of an £11 billion computing infrastructure push that Huang says will deliver 100 times the performance of Britain’s fastest current supercomputer, positioning the UK as a major player in the global AI race.

What you should know: Huang’s investment represents a significant vote of confidence in Britain’s AI capabilities at a time of intensifying geopolitical competition in artificial intelligence.
• Nvidia is taking an equity stake in NScale and predicts the UK firm will generate revenues of up to £50 billion over the next six years.
• The broader £11 billion investment includes selling 120,000 graphics processing units (specialized computer chips that power AI systems) to the UK, with 70% of costs going toward computing and networking infrastructure.
• Huang cited Britain’s universities and AI companies like DeepMind, Google’s AI research lab, and Wayve, a self-driving car startup, as evidence of the country’s untapped potential.

The big picture: The announcement comes amid escalating tensions between the US and China over AI dominance, with China reportedly moving to ban its biggest AI firms from buying Nvidia chips.
• Huang expressed disappointment at Beijing’s reported ban, saying “it is safer for the world that China and the United States collaborate in AI.”
• The investment signals America’s tech giants are looking to strengthen partnerships with allied nations as AI becomes increasingly geopolitically sensitive.

What they’re saying: Huang criticized Britain for being “too humble” about its AI strengths and urged the country to develop sovereign AI capabilities.
• “You just don’t appreciate it. Your universities. Come on. You’re too humble,” he told a London press conference.
• “Every country should create its own AI… The data belongs to you. It belongs to your people. It’s created by your people, your companies.”
• On artist copyright concerns: “Artists should have the ability to monetise their creation… we have to find ways for them to continue to do so.”

Key challenges ahead: Despite his optimistic predictions, Huang acknowledged significant infrastructure hurdles remain for Britain’s AI ambitions.
• Securing sufficient electricity to power data centers represents “a challenge,” with nuclear and gas turbine power stations needed.
• The warning comes as high-profile artists including Elton John and Mick Jagger criticized Labour for failing to protect copyright holders from AI training practices.

Why this matters: The investment demonstrates how AI leadership is becoming a national competitiveness issue, with countries racing to build domestic capabilities while navigating complex geopolitical tensions around technology access and data sovereignty.

UK is going to be ‘AI superpower’, says Nvidia boss as he invests £500m

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