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OpenAI Launches Stargate UK With the Promise of Sovereign AI Infrastructure

But how 'sovereign' is it, really?

Paul SawersbyPaul Sawers
September 19, 2025
in News
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OpenAI this week announced plans to bring its Stargate AI compute project to the UK, establishing domestic infrastructure designed to give the country sovereign control over advanced AI systems.

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The announcement formed part of a broader suite of UK-US tech and energy deals unveiled this week, timed to coincide with President Trump’s UK visit. These included Alphabet committing £5 billion to a new London-area data centre, and Microsoft and Nvidia pledging multi-billion-dollar support for UK AI infrastructure.

OpenAI first unveiled the Stargate Project in January, an effort to build massive AI supercomputing capacity for OpenAI in the US. Stargate was funded from the outset by OpenAI, Oracle, and two investors from outside the US: Japan’s SoftBank and MGX, a newer UAE-based fund and AI investor. In terms of structure, SoftBank holds the financial reins with founder Masayoshi Son chairing the venture, and OpenAI directing day-to-day operations.

The total investment was pegged at $500 billion over four years, with $100 billion committed immediately.

The project may have originally been conceived as a “make America great again” effort, but by May, there were already signs of how it could go international, when OpenAI announced OpenAI for Countries, a Stargate strand to push the infrastructure model to other markets. Taking the domestic groundwork it was already laying in the US, the idea was now to offer it as a model other nations could adopt.

OpenAI pitches the initiative as a way for governments to build sovereign AI infrastructure, including in-country data centre capacity so data stays under national control; customised versions of ChatGPT tuned to local language, culture, and regulation; strong security/safety measures; and support for local AI ecosystems via startup funding.

Stargate UK also extends from an existing memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between OpenAI and the UK government in July, which laid out a shared intent (and business funnel for OpenAI) to accelerate AI adoption and growth under the UK’s AI Opportunities Action Plan.

Other recent expansions of the OpenAI for Countries program include Stargate UAE and Stargate Norway which launched in May and July, respectively.

But how ‘Sovereign’ is Sovereign?

The inaugural UAE announcement in May brought in a wide cast of international partners including Oracle, Nvidia, Cisco, and SoftBank. The UK launch, however, follows a structure closer to Norway’s: it is anchored by a domestic infrastructure provider, in the UK in the form of Nscale, and it is framed around national growth zones, such as Cobalt Park in the North East.

But it’s also tapping significant firepower from outside the domestic realm. The $4 trillion US AI infrastructure darling Nvidia is very much part of the UK launch, with the company not only supplying the GPUs that underpin Stargate UK, but also taking an equity stake in Nscale as part of a £500 million package to expand data centre capacity across the country.

In other words, while OpenAI is keen to position sovereignty at the heart of the Stargate UK launch — going so far as to mention that designs by British chip design company Arm form part of Nvidia’s latest series of chips — the UK rollout highlights how indispensable US technology remains at both the hardware and financing layer.

It’s a reminder that even in the UK, the biggest technology business and value producer in Europe, “in-country” AI infrastructure for now ultimately rests on oft-volatile global supply chains.

Tags: OpenAIStargate UKUK
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Paul Sawers

Paul Sawers

A seasoned technology journalist, most recently Senior Writer at TechCrunch where his work centered on European startups with a distinctly enterprise flavour. At Resilience Media, Paul focuses substantively on the worlds of open source and infrastructure, looking at technology that helps people and society live outside the sticky ecosystems of Big Tech.

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