New report sets out manifesto for UK turbocharging economic growth through harnessing sustainable and energy-efficient AI
London: The UK must become the next ‘green AI superpower’ according to the country’s only trade association for AI businesses.
The report, produced by UKAI, argues that Britain has a clear opportunity to lead the next phase of global artificial intelligence by becoming the world’s foremost hub for Green AI. This includes ensuring that AI that is efficient, affordable, deployable at scale, and aligned with long-term economic and environmental sustainability.
That is the central conclusion of a new report published today by UKAI, the trade body representing the UK’s AI industry. As AI scales rapidly, the report argues that global leadership will be shaped not just by technical capability, but by how effectively countries integrate AI with energy systems, infrastructure, markets, and public trust.
Rather than competing on raw compute alone, the report makes the case that future advantage will belong to countries that deliver the greatest economic and social value per unit of energy, infrastructure, and resource.
UKAI argues that the UK is uniquely positioned to lead this shift. High energy costs, grid constraints, complex planning systems, and strong public scrutiny mean the UK is already operating under the conditions that many other AI economies will soon face. Far from holding the UK back, these pressures are driving innovation in efficiency, system design, and coordination, the foundations of Green AI.
Four priorities for Green AI leadership
The report sets out four mutually reinforcing priorities that together define a Green AI strategy. The include integrated infrastructure, fairer pricing, targeted innovation and smarter systems.
Tim Flagg, Chief Executive of UKAI said: “The UK is at a crossroads; with the opportunity to become the next green AI superpower, if we seize the moment.”
Flagg continued, “We do not need to win the AI race by building scale. Our advantage is learning how to make AI work in the real world: efficiently, affordably, and responsibly. We already have the foundations: world-class research, strong innovation, and hard-won experience operating under energy and infrastructure constraints. That gives us a genuine opportunity to lead, and to export Green British AI to a global market that is starting to face the same challenges and require the solutions that we are pioneering. But this window will not stay open for long, we need to act now.”
A recent report from Capgemini’s Nikhil Gulati suggested that agentic AI could play a crucial role in creating more secure critical national infrastructure.
Charlotte Wilson, Head of Enterprise business UKI Check Point Software said: “The global race develop sustainable, energy-efficient AI solutions is vital for securing Britain’s long-term growth and the safety and security of its critical national infrastructure. With growing volumes of increasingly sophisticated cyber attacks targeted at utilities and power providers, it’s essential that any new AI deployments are secure by design, rather than having cyber protection simply bolted on as an afterthought.
She continued, “The opportunity to become a green AI superpower brings with it huge economic opportunities, but crucial to its success is rigorous protection of devices and data from outsider threats.”
A strategic opportunity for the UK
The report concludes that Green AI is not a constraint on growth, but a strategic and global opportunity, one that allows the UK to align competitiveness, sustainability, and public trust as AI becomes a foundational part of the world economy.





