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Tech

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's most powerful supercomputer comes online

The Bristol-based Isambard-AI machine is expected to help develop new medical cures and tools to cut emissions

The Government has pledged £1bn to increase Britain’s computer capacity 20-fold by 2030(Image: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire)

Britain’s most powerful supercomputer has come online as the Government unveils plans for a major drive in AI research across the country.

Technology secretary Peter Kyle flicked the switch on the Isambard-AI machine in Bristol on Thursday, in a move ministers say will help the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ develop new medical cures and tools to cut emissions.

The Government has pledged £1bn to increase Britain’s computer capacity 20-fold by 2030, including through the creation of a series of AI “growth zones” designed to hasten planning approvals for new data centres.

One of these will be built in Scotland, where chancellor Rachel Reeves has also confirmed £750m of funding will be dedicated to developing another supercomputer in Edinburgh, and another in Wales.

Together with a second existing supercomputer in Cambridge, Isambard is expected to be able to process in one second “what it would take the entire global population 80 years to achieve”, the Government said.

Businesses and scientists are expected to be able to use the systems to process more of the data required to train and build AI models to make new drug discoveries and breakthroughs in climate change technology.

Researchers at the University of Liverpool are already using the machine to sift through tens of millions of chemical combinations in the hopes of finding ways to decarbonise British industry.

The plans form part of the new Compute Roadmap, a strategy aimed at reducing reliance on foreign processing power and transform the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s public compute capacity.