Published: March 30, 2026. The English Chronicle Desk.
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Nscale, one of Britain’s most prominent AI infrastructure startups, is facing a wave of local opposition over plans to build a massive new data centre in Essex. The facility, which has been billed as “the UK’s largest AI supercomputer,” is intended to serve Microsoft as a primary client following a high-profile partnership between the two companies. However, the project has hit a significant roadblock as officials in Loughton have formally objected to the development, citing grave concerns over its projected impact on the local power grid and residential electricity bills.
The controversy centers on a former scaffolding warehouse that Nscale—whose board includes former Deputy Prime Minister Sir Nick Clegg—plans to convert into a 50-megawatt AI processing hub. Local councillors and residents are reportedly “up in arms” after it was revealed that the building’s design has expanded to be 50% larger than originally proposed, requiring significantly more energy for both processing and cooling. Loughton Town Council has demanded that the startup provide “proper evidence” that the facility’s immense thirst for power won’t drive up costs for nearby homes or trigger local blackouts. “The community cannot be expected to subsidize the energy needs of a global tech giant through higher bills or a fragile grid,” one local official warned.
The backlash comes at an awkward time for Microsoft, which recently launched a “Community-First” initiative aimed at easing global tensions over its data centre expansions. While the tech giant has vowed to pay its “fair share” of infrastructure costs and avoid passing electricity price hikes onto residents, the Loughton project appears to have become a test case for these promises on British soil. The government has previously pointed to Nscale—which recently raised $2 billion in one of Europe’s largest-ever funding rounds—as a shining example of the UK’s burgeoning “AI superpower” status. Now, that vision is colliding with the practical realities of a national energy infrastructure already strained by the $116 oil price and the ongoing shift toward electrification.
As a result of the planning dispute, the opening of the Loughton site has already been pushed back from later this year to early 2027. The delay serves as a stark reminder that even the most well-funded AI “unicorns” must navigate the increasingly protective instincts of local communities. For Nscale and Microsoft, the challenge is now one of “hearts and minds” as much as hardware and code. Unless they can convince the people of Essex that this “supercomputer” is a neighborly asset rather than a resource-draining burden, the project risks becoming a high-profile monument to the growing friction between the global AI boom and local sustainability.

























































































