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rigins in 2023 as a spin-out from Arkon Energy, initially focused on cryptocurrency mining infrastructure, Nscale rapidly pivoted to address the soaring demand for AI-specific data centres capable of housing powerful GPU arrays. With an aggressive expansion strategy and substantial backing from industry giants like Nvidia, Microsoft, and OpenAI, Nscale has quickly positioned itself at the forefront of AI infrastructure development in Europe and beyond.
Nscale’s rapid ascent was marked by its Series A fundraising round in December 2024, which raised $155 million, and the subsequent influx of nearly $700 million in capital from Nvidia in 2025. These investments have empowered Nscale to secure major contracts and partnerships. Most notably, it has entered into a landmark five-year, $6.2 billion agreement with Microsoft and Norway-based Aker to develop hyperscale AI infrastructure, specifically targeting the European market with a significant buildout in Norway. OpenAI’s involvement has been equally prominent, with plans announced in July 2025 for a Stargate-branded AI data centre in Norway, underpinned by a $1 billion commitment aiming to deploy 100,000 Nvidia GPUs by 2027.
In the UK, Nscale is spearheading the creation of what is set to become the nation’s largest AI supercomputer at its AI Campus in Loughton, Essex. This facility will house 23,040 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs and generate an initial 50 megawatts of AI capacity, scalable up to 90 megawatts by early 2027. This effort is part of a broader, coordinated push to build sovereign AI compute platforms within the UK, aligning with the government’s AI “action plan” announced earlier in the year which aims to foster domestic AI growth by reducing regulatory barriers and encouraging large capital investments in AI-specific infrastructure.
The Loughton supercomputer project, announced on a day timed with President Donald Trump’s state visit to the UK, highlights Nscale’s role in positioning Britain as a global AI leader. Microsoft’s commitment of $15.5 billion to computing infrastructure, including the partnership with Nscale, signals strong confidence in the UK’s potential in this sector. Microsoft President Brad Smith emphasised that without assured downstream demand, such substantial investments would be untenable, underlining how partnerships like these provide the critical financial certainty necessary for infrastructure expansion.
Alongside Microsoft’s buildout, OpenAI, Nvidia, and Nscale have jointly launched Stargate UK, a sovereign AI infrastructure initiative designed to operate OpenAI’s technology within UK jurisdiction. Initial plans for Stargate UK include deploying 8,000 Nvidia GPUs in the first phase early next year, potentially expanding to over 31,000 GPUs distributed across multiple sites such as Cobalt Park in Newcastle, which is part of the newly designated AI Growth Zone in the North East. This collaboration marks a significant development in the transatlantic tech alliance and supports the UK government’s national AI Opportunities Action Plan.
Nvidia has played a critical role in fueling the country’s AI ambitions. Beyond its $683 million equity investment into Nscale, Nvidia has pledged a £11 billion ($15 billion) investment alongside partners such as CoreWeave to scale up AI infrastructure in the UK. This initiative will see the deployment of up to 60,000 Nvidia Grace Blackwell GPUs in the UK and up to 300,000 worldwide, tied to a historic infrastructure rollout that also includes quantum computing collaborations with Oxford Quantum Circuits.
Nscale’s growth mirrors that of other major AI infrastructure providers, such as CoreWeave, which transitioned from crypto mining to delivering AI infrastructure and currently manages a GPU fleet of 250,000. However, while CoreWeave has raised significant debt and equity, Nscale’s aggressive fundraising strategy — including a recent $1.1 billion Series B funding round led by Norway’s Aker with additional backing from Nokia and Dell — underscores its ambition to deploy up to 58,640 Nvidia GPUs in the UK alone and 300,000 globally.
CEO Josh Payne has highlighted two major challenges in Europe’s AI infrastructure scene: a lack of sufficient compute capacity and a fragmented market. Nscale’s vertically integrated approach, merging data centre space, power, and GPU technology with proprietary software, aims to address these issues comprehensively. Payne has described recent deals as a “huge win for European-owned AI infrastructure,” and the company aims to make substantial GPU deployments—targeting 50,000 units by the end of 2025 and 150,000 by the end of 2026—at a time when GPU density and scalability remain among the industry’s central technical challenges.
The UK government’s support, alongside major corporate investment, places Nscale at the core of the country’s strategy to become a sovereign AI powerhouse, combining massive hardware deployments with sovereign compute capabilities designed to meet high-assurance, secure needs for both public and private sectors. Nscale’s rise illustrates a broader trend where AI infrastructure providers are emerging from niche origins—often crypto mining—to dominate the high-growth AI market by delivering scalable, sovereign AI computing power in strategic regions worldwide.
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Source: Noah Wire Services