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 AWS to Invest $10.44 Billion in UK’s Digital Infrastructure

AWS to Invest $10.44 Billion in UK’s Digital Infrastructure

As part of its plans to grow infrastructure across the world, the US-based global tech major Amazon Web Services (AWS) has announced plans to invest $10.44 billion into the UK’s digital infrastructure over the next five years.

The company said that the investment into its digital and AI infrastructure will help meet the growing needs of its customers and support the transformation of the UK’s digital economy. The UK’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Jane Reeves secured the planned five-year investment last week at a meeting with AWS.

The company estimates that the investment will support around 14,000 jobs per year in local businesses, including those across the company’s data centre supply chain such as construction, facility maintenance, engineering and telecommunications, as well as other jobs within the broader local economy.

AWS also estimates that these investments in the UK will contribute $18.28 billion to the UK’s total GDP from 2024 to 2028.

The investment announcement came ahead of this year’s UK International Investment Summit on October 14, where the UK will bring together the world’s most important companies and investors, demonstrating how the UK’s offer is the best in the world, with political and economic stability, a strategic government partnering with businesses, a proper trade strategy, and policies designed to enable growth.

After the announcement by Reeves, all data centres in the UK have been designated as Critical National Infrastructure (CNI). With CNI status, the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) said that these centres sector can now expect greater government support in recovering from and anticipating critical incidents.

Economy’s Revival Begins

Speaking from a University Technical College in Silverstone, which works with AWS to introduce students to the skills required to enter the digital infrastructure industry, she warned that change cannot happen overnight and two quarters of positive economic growth will not make up for fourteen years of stagnation under the previous government.

“I am under no illusion to the scale of the challenge facing our economy and the AWS investment marks the start of the economic revival and shows Britain is a place to do business,” Reeves said.

“I am determined to go further so we can deliver on our mandate to create jobs, unlock investment and make every part of Britain better off. The hard work to fix the foundations of our economy has only just begun,” she added.

AWS Vice President and Managing Director for Europe, Middle East & Africa (EMEA) Tanuja Randery said that the next few years could be among the most pivotal for the UK’s digital and economic future, as organisations of all sizes across the country were increasingly embracing technologies like cloud computing and AI to help them accelerate innovation, increase productivity, and compete on the global stage.

Global Business Magazine

Global Business Magazine

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