- President Trump is visiting the United Kingdom to ensure technological trade agreements
- The great technological leaders, including Sam Altman de OpenAi, are also visiting
- Ai, quantum computing, semiconductors and will probably be covered
This week a new American-Reido-Reeine technology pact will be signed during the visit of President Trump to London, focusing on emerging technologies such as AI and quantum computing, as well as semiconductors, telecommunications and space.
The change will come not only when the president of the United States visits the United Kingdom, but also key influential in Big Tech, including the CEO of Nvidia, Jensen Huang, the CEO of Operai, Sam Altman, and the Blackstone CEO, Stephen Schwarzman.
Although the scale of the agreement has not yet been confirmed, it is believed to be positioned as an effort to overcome China in geopolitically influenced technology and commercial wars.
USA and the United Kingdom to achieve a technological agreement
The Parliament of the United Kingdom described the objective of the agreement as the final sector uncertainty, ensuring supply chains and promoting US investment to the United Kingdom.
At the moment, the United States is the largest unique commercial partner in the United Kingdom, which represents 18% of the United Kingdom trade (estimated at £ 315 billion in 2024). The United Kingdom exports approximately 196 billion to the United States, representing about 2% of the total national income, with mutual commercial investments for a total of £ 1.2 billion.
The current economic prosperity agreement is a non -binding agreement through which the United Kingdom assured tariff reductions, however, some commercial agreements are still worse than the agrees of the transmission and even some EU agreements.
For example, although automotive tariffs had been reduced from 25% to 10%, there is a fee of 100,000 vehicles instead.
President of the Common Business and Commerce Committee, RT Hon Liam Byrne MP, praised the United Kingdom Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, to ensure the agreement: “The state visit of President Trump is not a mere contest. It is a proof of whether Britain and the United States build a safer and rich future, or remain trapped in tariffs that do not serve.”