OpenAI Brings ChatGPT Enterprise to 2,500 UK Gov Officials – Technology Magazine
OpenAI has entered into an agreement with the UK Ministry of Justice to equip 2,500 civil servants with access to ChatGPT Enterprise, advancing a memorandum of understanding established earlier this year between OpenAI and the UK Government.
The partnership follows a successful pilot programme that showcased measurable time-saving benefits across tasks such as drafting and editing, compliance and legal review, data gathering, research and document analysis.
By deploying the technology, civil servants will enhance everyday efficiency and strengthen public service delivery.
The announcement coincides with the OpenAI Frontiers event in London, where British public sector leaders will join the Lord Chancellor, Secretary of State for Justice and Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy.
During the event, the Deputy Prime Minister will outline how the Ministry of Justice is setting a benchmark for responsible and effective AI adoption across government.
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, says: “The number of people using our products in the UK has increased fourfold in the past year. It’s exciting to see them using AI to save time, increase productivity and get more done. Civil servants are using ChatGPT to improve public services and established firms are reimagining operations.”
The initiative aligns with the Ministry of Justice’s AI Action Plan for Justice, making the department the first to benefit from UK data residency options set to be introduced by OpenAI on 24 October.
OpenAI will introduce UK data residency for British customers and developers across its API Platform, ChatGPT Enterprise and ChatGPT Edu.
The new option enables organisations to store data within the UK to align with local data protection standards and compliance requirements.
This announcement builds on the memorandum of understanding signed with the UK Government, which emphasised strengthening the nation’s sovereign AI capabilities.
OpenAI has also unveiled Stargate UK, a strategic AI infrastructure partnership with Nvidia and Nscale, designed to power OpenAI’s models using local compute resources for specialised, jurisdiction-sensitive applications.
The UK data residency option functions independently of the Stargate UK infrastructure partnership.
It enables British customers and developers to store their data within the UK when using OpenAI’s platforms and services.
Deputy Prime Minister and Lord Chancellor David Lammy says: “Our partnership with OpenAI places Britain firmly in the driving seat of the global tech revolution – leading the world in innovation and using technology to deliver fairness and opportunity for every corner of the United Kingdom.”
OpenAI technology underpins several tools currently in use across the UK Government.
Humphrey, Whitehall’s AI assistant, leverages OpenAI models to reduce administrative workloads for civil servants.
Another application, Consult, streamlines the policymaking process by automatically analysing public consultation responses – a task that previously required weeks of effort and can now be completed in minutes, while final judgments remain in the hands of experts.
The UK ranks among OpenAI’s top five markets globally for paid subscribers and API developers.
British organisations adopting OpenAI’s tools include NatWest, Virgin Atlantic, Synthesia and Oxford University.
Over the past year, the number of UK users engaging with OpenAI products has grown fourfold.
The Ministry of Justice agreement forms part of the UK’s AI Action Plan, designed to accelerate AI-driven growth and adoption across both public and private sectors.
The memorandum of understanding between OpenAI and the UK Government outlines shared goals to ensure that British citizens, businesses and institutions can fully benefit from AI innovation.
OpenAI’s latest infrastructure and data residency initiatives support the country’s ambitions for sovereign AI capability and locally powered systems.
The Stargate UK partnership with Nvidia and Nscale will deliver OpenAI’s models through UK-based computing resources for applications where data jurisdiction and compliance are critical.
The Ministry of Justice pilot programme evaluated ChatGPT Enterprise across multiple civil service functions ahead of its broader rollout to 2,500 employees.
The trial explored use cases spanning writing assistance, compliance and legal processes, research workflows and document analysis.
The OpenAI Frontiers event in London brings together UK customers and partners to explore AI opportunities within the national market.
Attendees include representatives from organisations and institutions already leveraging OpenAI technology to enhance operations and public service delivery.
Sam Altman says: “We’re proud to continue supporting the UK and the Government’s AI plan.”
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