Latest news with #militaryInvestment


Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Business
- Daily Mail
UK's military and spy services set for £330m AI tech boost to help track enemies
Hundreds of millions of pounds will be invested in cutting-edge drones and artificial intelligence for the military as part of Rachel Reeves ' attempt to revive the flagging economy. The Chancellor's new industrial strategy will include a £330 million investment in technology used by the Armed Forces, such as 'next-generation drones' to be developed for joint use on the battlefield and by the emergency services. Money will also be ploughed into ultra-powerful computers for MI5, MI6 and GCHQ as well as artificial intelligence (AI) applications to track enemy targets. The investment, part of the strategy being launched tomorrow, comes as Ms Reeves is struggling to boost the UK's flagging growth prospects, which the Confederation of British Industry last week slashed to 1.2 per cent for this year and 1 per cent for 2026. In addition, government borrowing hit a non-pandemic record for May and retail sales last week were down. Without proper growth, the Chancellor will likely have to make the unenviable choice between hiking taxes further in autumn's Budget or breaking her fiscal rules. Ms Reeves has promised that the ten-year infrastructure strategy will lead to a 'decade of national renewal'. The Government is putting £15.6 billion into transport upgrades, £39 billion into social and affordable housing and £14.2 billion for the Sizewell C nuclear power station. Money will also be ploughed into ultra-powerful computers for MI5, MI6 and GCHQ as well as artificial intelligence (AI) applications to track enemy targets. pictured: MI6 headquarters Ms Reeves told The Mail on Sunday she intended to 'pull together a plan to exploit new opportunities, whether it's AI, energy technology, a whole range of parts of the economy'. She added: 'I'm really optimistic about Britain's future. We've got great businesses, we've got great trade deals... I don't see any reason for Britain not to be leaders in these jobs and industries of the future.' But Shadow Chancellor Sir Mel Stride said: 'We have to put the public finances back on a sustainable footing. A future Conservative government will have to contend with a bloated national debt after Labour's reckless borrowing splurge. 'We will never make promises we cannot afford, and our plans will always be fully costed. Labour's "spend now, tax later" approach is utterly short-sighted. 'It mortgages Britain's future for short-term political convenience and leaves ordinary families to foot the bill.'


TechCrunch
5 days ago
- Business
- TechCrunch
Spotify's Daniel Ek just bet bigger on Helsing, Europe's defense tech darling
When Daniel Ek isn't busy running Spotify or building his new AI-driven health tech enterprise, he's making massive bets on the future of European warfare, seemingly. The billionaire, who primarily lives in Stockholm, just led a €600 million investment in Helsing, a four-year-old, Munich-based defense tech company that is now valued at €12 billion, according to the Financial Times. The deal makes it one of Europe's most valuable privately held companies; it also highlights Europe's scramble to build its own military muscle as the world grows messier and the U.S. turns inward. The numbers help tell the story. Helsing raised $450 million just shy of a year ago; now, it's back with this even bigger round led by Ek's investment firm Prima Materia. It's part of a broader defense tech boom that's seeing money flood into companies like the U.S. giant Anduril, which just raised $2.5 billion led by Founders Fund, and European drone makers Quantum Systems and Tekever. (In recent weeks, they announced €160 million and €70 million, respectively, in rounds that put them both into so-called unicorn territory.) TechCrunch has reached out to Helsing for more details about how it plans to use the new funding. As for what, exactly, Helsing does, Wired said last year to think of it as turning modern warfare into something that looks more like a video game, except with very real consequences. The company's main product takes massive amounts of data from military sensors, radars, and weapons systems, then uses AI to create intuitive, real-time visualizations of what's happening on the battlefield. Instead of soldiers making life-or-death decisions based on phone calls and hand-drawn maps, everyone is seeing the same information, whether from a frontline trench or a command center miles away. But what started as an AI software company has grown much more ambitious. Helsing is now building its own strike drones and aircraft and said it's working on a fleet of unmanned mini submarines in order to irmprove naval surveillance. The timing isn't coincidental. As American investor Eric Slesinger told TechCrunch this spring, 'European governments waited way too long to rethink what the arrangement on their own security meant.' The wake-up call came with Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which made it clear that Europe couldn't rely on American protection alone. The U.S. election late last year of President Donald Trump — who is far more interested in advancing American interests — has since put a much finer point on things. Techcrunch event Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Boston, MA | REGISTER NOW Now European leaders are talking about spending big on defense while achieving strategic autonomy, meaning their ability to handle their own security. Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis recently summed up the movement in a separate interview with TechCrunch: 'We're going to spend a lot of money on defense as Europe. The defense landscape is changing, which is no longer just going to be about planes, tanks—this is all going to be much more digitally and AI driven.' A couple of years ago, that realization was the impetus for the NATO Innovation Fund, the world's first multi-sovereign venture capital fund backed by 24 NATO allies. But the capital pool is just one of several signs that Europe has grown serious about building its own defense tech ecosystem rather than relying on the U.S. for protection. Ek, who first invested in Helsing back in 2021, before the outbreak of the Ukraine war, has perhaps seen for a while where thing are heading. As he said in a press release about Monday's funding: 'As Europe rapidly strengthens its defense capabilities in response to evolving geopolitical challenges, there is an urgent need for investments in advanced technologies that ensure its strategic autonomy.' Other investors in Helsing's new round include earlier backers Lightspeed Ventures, Accel, Plural, General Catalyst and Saab, and new investors BDT & MSD Partners. The company has now raised €1.37 billion altogether.