Press release

£54 million boost to develop secure and trustworthy AI research

Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology Chloe Smith has today announced a series of investments to develop trustworthy artificial intelligence (AI) research.

Growing the UK's tech ecosystem

  • £54 million investment to support the UK’s AI and data science workforce and develop trustworthy and secure AI
  • new Geospatial Strategy to drive growth through technologies including AI, satellite imaging, and real-time data
  • new pilot programme backed by up to £50 million in government funding to accelerate new research ventures with industry, philanthropic organisations and the third sector

Universities across the UK are set to benefit from a substantial £54 million investment in their work to develop cutting edge artificial intelligence (AI) technology, Technology Secretary Chloe Smith announced today.

Delivered through UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), £31 million of the funding will be used to back ground-breaking research at the University of Southampton to establish responsible and trustworthy AI, bringing together the expertise of academia, business, and the wider public to explore how responsible AI can be developed and utilised, while considering its broader impact on wider society.

The Technology Secretary unveiled the package in a keynote speech at London Tech Week, advancing efforts to secure the UK’s position as a science and tech superpower, fuel economic growth and create better paid jobs. The Tech Secretary also announced the launch of the UK Geospatial Strategy 2030, which will unlock billions of pounds in economic benefits through harnessing technologies including AI, satellite imaging and real-time data.

Technology Secretary Chloe Smith, said:

Despite our size as a small island nation, the UK is a technology powerhouse. Last year, the UK became just the third country in the world to have a tech sector valued at $1 trillion. It is the biggest in Europe by some distance and behind only the US and China globally.

The technology landscape, though, is constantly evolving, and we need a tech ecosystem which can respond to those shifting sands, harness its opportunities, and address emerging challenges. The measures unveiled today will do exactly that.

We’re investing in our AI talent pipeline with a £54 million package to develop trustworthy and secure artificial intelligence, and putting our best foot forward as a global leader in tech both now, and in the years to come.

AI developments present enormous opportunities in almost every aspect of modern life, particularly in addressing climate change challenges and pursuing net zero targets. As part of this investment, the remaining £13 million will be used to fund 13 projects based at universities across the UK to develop pioneering AI innovations in sustainable land management, efficient CO2 capture, and improved resilience against natural hazards.

The commitments follow the announcement in March of £117 million funding for Centres for Doctoral Training in AI, with a further £46 million to support Turing AI Fellowships to develop the next generation of top AI talent.

In pursuit of the UK’s science and technology superpower ambitions, Chloe Smith has also announced the Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology will shortly launch an open call for proposals to pilot new, collaborative approaches to scientific research in the UK, backed by £50 million in government funding. The money will drive investment and partnership with industry and further afield to fund the ideas and innovations which aren’t currently addressed in the UK research sector, and opens in the coming weeks. This will benefit the UK’s research community by allowing organisations to explore the viability of new models for performing research in specific areas, bypassing the large start-up costs normally needed to setup an entirely new institution.

The UK Science and Technology framework sets out how the UK will respond to emerging and critical technologies. Geospatial technology is one such example, and the new UK Geospatial Strategy, which will launch tomorrow (Thursday 15 June), will drive the use of location data right across the economy including property, transportation and beyond, fuelling growth through innovation.

Professor Dame Ottoline Leyser, Chief Executive of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) said:

UKRI is investing in the people and technologies that will improve lives for people in the UK and around the world. By supporting research to develop AI that is useful, trustworthy and trusted, we are laying solid foundations on which we can build new industries, products and services across a wide range of fields.

Working though cross-disciplinary partnerships we will ensure that responsible innovation is integrated across all aspects of the work as it progresses.

The measures announced today will fuel the government’s mission to make the UK the most innovative economy in the world and build a technology ecosystem which cements the UK’s place at the frontier of global tech development.

Notes to editors

Full UKRI programmes being supported

£31 million to create a UK and international research and innovation ecosystem for responsible and trustworthy AI. The consortium led by the University of Southampton will fund multi-disciplinary research and work across academia, business, and the public sector.

£2 million for 42 projects’ feasibility studies in businesses as part of the BridgeAI programme. These projects will look at developing a range of tools to facilitate assessment of AI technologies through governance, fairness, accountability, transparency, and privacy, and security.

£8 million for 2 Turing AI World Leading Researcher Fellowships, funding ground-breaking research on some of artificial intelligence’s biggest challenges including its application across drug and food design, and healthcare imaging.

£13 million to fund 13 projects to help the UK meet its net zero targets. The projects will look at developing AI technologies to have more sustainable land management, accelerate energy efficient CO2 capture, and improve resilience for natural hazards and extreme events. The programmes supported are:

  • Imperial College London (£1.4 million - Real-time digital optimisation and decision making for energy and transport systems)
  • University of Edinburgh (£245,757 - Real-time Digital Optimisation And Decision Making For Energy And Transport Systems)
  • University of Cambridge (£265,537 - Real-time Digital Optimisation And Decision Making For Energy And Transport Systems)
  • University of Oxford (£265,915 - Real-time digital optimisation and decision making for energy and transport systems)
  • Heriot-Watt University (£1,790,578 - Enabling CO2 capture and storage using AI)
  • Imperial College London (£762,325 - Enabling CO2 capture and storage using AI)
  • University of Leicester (£2,492,147.67 - Self-Learning Digital Twins for Sustainable Land Management)
  • Durham University (£1,845,327 - Virtual Power Plant with Artificial Intelligence for Resilience and Decarbonisation)
  • University of Surrey (£1,436,523 - Artificial Intelligence Enabling Future Optimal Flexible Biogas Production for Net-Zero)
  • University of Exeter (£1,669,406 - User-bespoke AI-enhanced decision support to deliver UK woodland expansion for Net Zero)
  • Aberystwyth University (£502,950 - Miscanthus AI- Plant selection and breeding for Net Zero)
  • University of Lincoln (£534,887 - Plant selection and breeding for Net Zero)
  • University of Southampton (£254,638 - Plant selection and breeding for Net Zero)
Published 14 June 2023