In recent developments, the UK government has upgraded datacenters to critical national infrastructure status, a strategic move followed closely by substantial commitments from US tech giants to establish data facilities across the region. With a spotlight on Britain’s International Investment Summit in London, the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology (DSIT) has reported an accumulative investment of over £25 billion in the sector since the current government began.
Among the key players, CyrusOne and CloudHQ, recognized datacenter providers, alongside ServiceNow, a business software leader, and CoreWeave, specializing in GPU-accelerated cloud services, have announced their financial stakes in the UK. CoreWeave, in particular, details a £750 million boost towards AI cloud infrastructure, augmenting its prior commitments.
CloudHQ’s plans include a massive £1.9 billion datacenter construction in Oxfordshire, promising substantial job creation during both the development and operational phases. Meanwhile, ServiceNow prepares to infuse £1.15 billion into its UK operations, expanding workforce and technological capabilities with Nvidia GPUs.
CyrusOne, already operating five datacenters around Greater London, intends to elevate its total investment to £2.5 billion over the coming years, a plan encompassing more jobs, pending planning permissions.
Technology Secretary Peter Kyle emphasized the pivotal role of datacenters in daily life and AI advancements, asserting the UK’s position as a safe haven for tech investments. During the summit, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt discussed AI-driven economic opportunities with Prime Minister Keir Starmer, highlighting the need for skilled international labor to support the growth trajectories set by these substantial investments.