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UK Data Centre Spending to Hit £10 Billion Annually by 2029 Amid AI Boom

Spending on new UK data centres is set to surge to £10 billion a year by 2029, more than five times higher than in 2024, according to new analysis from construction data firm Barbour ABI.

The report found that £1.75 billion was spent on data centre construction in 2023, with that figure projected to rise to £2.38 billion in 2025 as demand for AI-driven computing power continues to accelerate. Over the next five years, tech giants including Microsoft, Nvidia, and Google are expected to invest a combined £25 billion in the UK’s data infrastructure, with nearly 100 new projects already in the pipeline.

Barbour ABI said the expansion reflects both global AI adoption and UK government initiatives, such as the AI Growth Zones, designed to speed up planning approvals for digital infrastructure.

While London and its surrounding regions remain the country’s data centre hub, development is now spreading nationwide, driven by rising demand for low-latency connectivity and renewable energy sources to power data-intensive AI systems.

The largest upcoming project is a $13 billion hyperscale data centre planned in North East England, led by U.S. private equity group Blackstone—a sign that international investors view the UK as a strategic AI infrastructure hub.

The rise in data centre construction comes amid a global race to expand digital capacity following the release of ChatGPT in late 2022, which sparked an explosion in AI model training, cloud computing, and enterprise automation.

Barbour ABI said the shift marks one of the fastest-growing infrastructure trends in the country’s history. “AI has completely reshaped data demands,” the report noted. “We’re now entering a decade defined by hyperscale expansion.”

UN Cybercrime Pact to Be Signed in Hanoi Sparks Both Hope and Human Rights Concerns

A landmark United Nations cybercrime treaty, designed to strengthen global cooperation against online offences costing the world economy trillions of dollars each year, is set to be signed this weekend in Hanoi, marking a major step in international cybersecurity governance — but also igniting deep concerns about human rights risks.

The UN convention, which will take effect once 40 nations ratify it, aims to accelerate cross-border responses to crimes such as ransomware, phishing, and online trafficking. However, human rights groups, major technology firms, and even the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights have warned that vague definitions in the treaty could allow authoritarian governments to misuse the pact for surveillance or censorship.

The European Union and Canada have confirmed plans to sign, saying the final text includes safeguards for civil liberties, while the U.S. has not confirmed whether it will attend the signing ceremony. UN Secretary-General António Guterres is scheduled to preside over the event on Saturday.

Vietnam’s role as host has drawn scrutiny due to its record of online repression. The U.S. State Department and Human Rights Watch recently reported that at least 40 people have been arrested in Vietnam this year for online posts critical of the government. Critics say holding the signing there “sends a troubling message” about digital rights, particularly as Vietnam continues to tighten control over internet speech.

The Cybersecurity Tech Accord, a coalition that includes Meta and Microsoft, has dubbed the agreement a “surveillance treaty,” warning it could enable excessive data sharing between governments and “make it easier, not harder, for criminals to engage in cybercrime.”

Despite the controversy, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), which led negotiations, insists the treaty includes human rights protections and allows countries to refuse cooperation requests that violate international law. It also states that the agreement “encourages legitimate cybersecurity research” — a point activists fear could still be used against ethical hackers who expose government vulnerabilities.

Vietnamese officials defended hosting the event, saying the nation faces rising cyberattacks on critical infrastructure and hopes the accord will boost its cyberdefence capabilities. Still, digital rights advocates like Raman Jit Singh Chima of Access Now warn that the pact risks being “a tool for repression disguised as global cooperation.”

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