UK-US Tech Prosperity Deal – What is it and what it means for tech


On 18 September 2025, the UK and United States published a Memorandum of Understanding called the Technology Prosperity Deal, committing the two governments to deepen cooperation in a range of science and technology areas.

Key tech areas for collaboration include:

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Civil nuclear (including advanced reactors, nuclear fuel, fusion)
  • Quantum technologies
  • Foundations of frontier innovation: research security, telecommunications (notably 6G), critical national infrastructure.

There’s also a structure: a ministerial-level working group within 6 months and annual formal reviews.

What this brings for the UK tech sector

Here are some of the most important implications and opportunities for UK companies, researchers, and the broader tech ecosystem.

1. Access to US Scale, Resources and Infrastructure

  • Compute and data sets: The deal explicitly envisages shared infrastructure and compute access (e.g. AI research resources), which could help British researchers and startups tap into larger datasets or compute capacity than might otherwise be feasible. 
  • Joint R&D / Flagship programmes: With combined funding and joint priorities (e.g. AI-for-health, fusion, precision medicine), UK entities have a chance to collaborate on large, ambitious projects.

2. Boosting Innovation in High-Impact Areas

  • Quantum and AI: The UK already has strong capabilities in quantum (sensing, computing) and developing AI frameworks. This deal could accelerate UK leadership in these fields - through shared efforts on standardisation, benchmarking, industry exchange programmes, etc. 
  • Civil nuclear and fusion: If regulatory pathways are streamlined, and supply chains for advanced fuels and reactors become more secure, UK firms in nuclear tech stand to benefit both domestically and via exports.

3. Standards, Regulation and Security

  • The deal emphasises pro-innovation regulation, safety, non-proliferation, and cooperation of rules and standards (for example, in AI metrology, quantum standards, nuclear licensing).
  • Research security and protection of critical/emerging tech is central.

4. Talent, Trade and Exports

  • Skills and workforce development: The MOU references collaboration on developing the workforce of the future, supporting citizens across the AI “supply chain.”
  • Exports and trade: With regulatory cooperation and joint efforts on standardisation, UK companies may find it easier to access the US market, or to co-sell. Also, civil nuclear exports may see new markets open up for UK supply chain players.

5. Strategic and Geopolitical Leverage

  • Being a partner in this kind of bilateral frontier tech agreement can give UK firms a competitive edge. As many countries race to set standards and capture leadership (AI, quantum, etc.), being in lockstep with the US gives the UK sector credibility and influence.
  • It also strengthens resilience: secure supply chains, alternative sources of critical materials/fuel, cooperation on tech regulation and defence are all key in a world of geopolitical uncertainty.

The MOU sets intentions but many details are yet to be defined (which projects, funding amounts, who leads, how easy it is to access opportunities). In addition, engagement of the working group with industry will be crucial to bringing this agreement to life and making it commercially meaningful.

techUK is looking forward to working with our counterparts in the US and both governments to deliver on the promises of this MoU.


For more information, please contact:

Sabina Ciofu

Sabina Ciofu

International Policy and Strategy Lead, techUK

Sabina Ciofu is International Policy and Strategy Lead at techUK, where she heads the International Policy and Trade Programme. Based in Brussels, she shapes global tech policy, digital trade, and regulatory cooperation across the EU, US, Canada, Asia-Pacific, and the Gulf region. She drives strategy, advocacy, and market opportunities for UK tech companies worldwide, ensuring their voice is heard in international policy debates.

With nearly a decade of previous experience as a Policy Advisor in the European Parliament, Sabina brings deep expertise in tech regulation, trade policy, and EU–US relations. Her work focuses on navigating and influencing the global digital economy to deliver real impact for members.

A passionate community-builder, Sabina co-founded Young Professionals in Digital Policy (800+ members) and now runs Old Professionals in Digital Policy (more experience, better wine, earlier nights). She is also the founder of the Gentlewomen’s Club, a network of 500+ women supporting each other with kindness.

She holds advisory roles with the UCL European Institute, Café Transatlantique (a network of women in transatlantic tech policy), and The Nine, Brussels’ first members-only club for women.

Recognised by ComputerWeekly as one of the most influential women in UK tech, Sabina is also a sought-after public speaker on tech, trade and diversity.

Sabina holds an MA in War Studies from King’s College London and a BA in Classics from the University of Cambridge.

She is a frequent traveler and a marathon runner.

Email:
[email protected]
Phone:
+32 473 323 280
Website:
www.techuk.org

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Daniel Clarke

Daniel Clarke

Senior Policy Manager for International Policy and Trade, techUK

Sabina Ciofu

Sabina Ciofu

International Policy and Strategy Lead, techUK

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