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Sovereign AI moving at speed “Craig David would blush at”

Sovereign AI has announced its first deals including an investment in AI infrastructure startup Callosum.

The chairman of the new £500m UK government-backed VC fund backing domestic AI startups last night channelled his inner Craig David to indicate the speed of its investing, rebuffing criticism that it might be slow and bureaucratic.

Referencing words from a David hit song, James Wise said: “Just last week we met a company that told us they were doing a fundraising round. On Monday, we met the founders. 

“On Tuesday, we did due diligence. On Wednesday, we made a decision. On Thursday, we took them out to celebrate, moving at a speed that Craig David would blush at.”

Wise was speaking at the launch event of Sovereign AI, which took place at the London headquarters of self-driving AI scaleup Wayve.

The event was packed with Wise, a partner at London VC Balderton, AI minister Kanishka Narayan, technology secretary Liz Kendall, Wayve CEO and co-founder Alex Kendall, and Meryem Arik, the CEO and co-founder of AI startup Doubleword, addressing the audience.

The launch event came as the first deals from the £500m fund, which is aimed at keeping the UK’s best AI startups in the UK as they scale across the world, were announced.

Wise said: “We are venture investors with a mandate to back the AI companies in Britain we believe are national priorities and on commercial terms.”

Generally speaking, the fund is investing cheques of between £5m and £10m, leading and following on investing rounds, usually investing in Seed and Series A.

It is investing in areas ranging from AI model development to AI drug discovery to agentic AI.

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The fund is also offering portfolio firms access to UK government-funded supercomputers, procurement opportunities, and free visas for international hires.

Wise is heading up Sovereign AI with Joséphine Kant, a VC who previously worked at Y Combinator.

Defending criticism about the size of its investments, when US AI firms were raising billions, Wise said the size of its investments could change the course of a company.

He added: “When the time comes for founders we work with to raise those larger rounds, we will be able to introduce them to the best investors in the world. And they will have a hotline to the British Business Bank, who we are already working with, hand in glove.”

Wise said one of the key criteria for investments was that “they must have the potential to be a huge commercial success”.

The fund has also faced criticism from some VCs that it might be bureaucratic and slow to invest.

Liz Kendall said: “I believe sovereign AI is going to be one of the most important things this government does to build a better future for our country.” 

She added that AI was “beyond negotiable for our national security”.

The first equity investment from the fund is in AI infrastructure startup Callosum, for an undisclosed amount.

The fund has also awarded compute power from its supercomputers to Prima Mente, Cosine, Cursive, Doubleword, Twig Bio and Odyssey, to train their AI models. In return, the fund will get a first refusal on future investment in some of these startups.

IMAGE: Callosum founders

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