US and UK Governments Agree To Collaborate on Nuclear, AI, and Quantum


The United States and the United Kingdom signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday to jointly develop artificial intelligence, nuclear energy, telecommunications and quantum computing for a wide range of uses including space travel, military defense, targeted biomedical drugs and medical procedures.

The MOU, which is not legally binding and changes no existing agreements between the two countries, proposes joint research initiatives between a host of government departments and agencies in both countries to study these emerging technologies.

The two countries will form a task group to develop quantum computing hardware, software, algorithms and interoperability standards, according to the MOU.

Quantum computing has become a high-interest topic in the crypto community, as sufficiently powerful quantum computers could crack modern encryption standards that are central to crypto’s very existence.

US President Donald Trump, left, and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, right, hold press briefing following the signing of the MOU. Source: The White House

The UK and US will also explore building 6G mobile telecommunications networks as part of the technological research and development effort.

US President Donald Trump touted the collaboration’s positive effect on investments across industrial sectors during Thursday’s press briefing with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Trump said:

“This trip has galvanized $350 billion in deals across many sectors, and we are committed to ensuring that the UK is a secure and reliable supply of the best AI hardware and software on Earth, and that we supply it.”

Trump said $17 trillion was invested in the US over the last year, as the country attempts to dominate the global race to lead in artificial intelligence, digital technologies and high-performance computing systems.