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Culham Campus

The UK's national hub for fusion energy research, robotics in extreme environments, materials science, advanced engineering and AI-accelerated simulation. 80 hectares, 3,000+ people, 45+ organisations — owned and operated by UKAEA near Abingdon, OX14.

3,000+
Campus community
45+
Organisations
#1 in UK
AI Growth Zone
150+
Apprentices

About Culham Campus

Culham Campus is the UK's headquarters for fusion energy research, operated by the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) on an 80-hectare site near Abingdon. More than 3,000 people work across 45+ organisations, including 17 companies in the fusion supply-chain cluster and 150+ apprentices in advanced technical training.

The campus began as Royal Naval Air Station HMS Hornbill in 1944. UKAEA selected it for a plasma physics and fusion laboratory in the late 1950s, opening in 1965 — marking 60 years of fusion research in 2025. It is not a speculative future-energy site: it is where some of the world's most important fusion experiments have already taken place, and where a large part of the UK's fusion expertise, engineering capability and supply-chain knowledge is concentrated.

Culham focuses on fusion energy, robotics, materials science, decommissioning, apprentice training and increasingly AI and high-performance computing.

UKAEA and key programmes

UKAEA's mission is to lead delivery of sustainable fusion energy for scientific and economic benefit. With around 2,600 employeesacross its sites, it runs the UK's full fusion programme — from plasma science to engineering, robotics, materials, tritium systems and decommissioning.

Programme / facilityWhat it does
MAST UpgradeUK's flagship spherical tokamak experiment — the world's largest operational spherical tokamak. Creates plasmas reaching ~30 million °C. Studies plasma exhaust, spherical tokamak physics and design knowledge for future power plants.
JET (decommissioning)The Joint European Torus — formerly the world's leading tokamak. Delivered final plasma (pulse 105,842) on 18 December 2023 after ~40 years. Now in decommissioning and repurposing to ~2040 — a major technical programme in its own right.
STEPSpherical Tokamak for Energy Production — the UK's prototype fusion power plant programme. Culham is central to the science, engineering, robotics and materials expertise feeding into STEP, even as the power plant site is in Nottinghamshire.
RACERemote Applications in Challenging Environments — UKAEA's robotics centre for extreme industrial environments. See below.
Materials Research Facility (MRF)Prepares and examines radioactive material samples; part of the National Nuclear User Facility and Henry Royce Institute for Advanced Materials. Bridges the gap between university labs and large nuclear licensed facilities.
Oxfordshire Advanced Skills (OAS)Apprentice and technical training centre on the secure campus. Pathways in advanced engineering, digital technology, electronics, materials and mechatronics.
Sunrise AI supercomputer£45m facility linked to the UK's first AI Growth Zone. Targeted for operation in June 2026. Supports fusion research through AI-accelerated modelling, high-fidelity simulations and digital twins.
Special Techniques GroupSpecialist material joining capability with decades of industry experience.

UK's first AI Growth Zone

Oxfordshire is not just near the UK's AI strategy — it is part of the delivery infrastructure

Culham Campus has been selected as the UK's first AI Growth Zone, connecting AI compute, fusion energy, data-centre infrastructure, UKAEA, Science Vale and the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor. The designation was announced in April 2025 and is backed by plans for one of the UK's largest AI data centres, beginning with 100MW capacity and scaling to 500MW. GOV.UK: AI Growth Zones

Sunrise AI supercomputer

The government committed £45m for Sunrise, a 1.4MW AI supercomputer at Culham targeted for operation in June 2026. It is designed to be the world's most powerful AI supercomputer dedicated to fusion energy, delivering up to 6.76 Exaflops of AI-accelerated modelling. Sunrise is a joint programme involving AMD, Dell Technologies, Intel, UKAEA, WEKA and the University of Cambridge. GOV.UK announcement

Sunrise applies AI where the problems are hardest: fusion energy. Use cases include plasma turbulence, materials development, tritium fuel breeding, high-fidelity simulation and digital twins for complex fusion systems.

Jobs the AI Growth Zone creates

Role familyWhy Culham benefits
AI infrastructure / data centresCompute facilities, power, cooling, networking, security, site operations
HPC / platform engineeringSunrise, fusion modelling, scientific computing, digital twins
Software engineeringAI tooling, simulation workflows, data pipelines, control systems
Energy engineeringGrid connections, power infrastructure, fusion-energy research
Robotics and autonomyRACE, remote handling, hazardous environments
Planning / construction / infrastructureLarge-scale data-centre and campus buildout
CybersecuritySecure compute, national infrastructure, AI systems

Why Culham was chosen: power, position and ping

Data centres have three fundamental requirements — power, position and ping — and Culham combines all three. This is the cleanest explanation for why Oxfordshire rather than anywhere else became the UK's first AI Growth Zone.

FactorWhy Culham qualifies
PowerLegacy power infrastructure from the Joint European Torus fusion experiment, decommissioned 2024. Plus a 500MW battery energy storage system secured by Statera Energy at the Culham substation site.
PositionUKAEA headquarters, Science Vale, Harwell Campus, Milton Park and Oxford within 30 minutes. Deep technical workforce; 40+ organisations on campus.
PingLow-latency compute matters for AI inference, autonomous systems, remote healthcare and high-performance applications. Oxford proximity and M4/M40 connectivity support fast data routing.

Critical national infrastructure

In September 2024 the UK Government designated data centres as critical national infrastructure, placing them alongside energy, water and telecommunications. This shifts the Culham AI Growth Zone from a commercial development story to one about nationally significant infrastructure — relevant to planning policy, investment certainty and public-sector procurement.

The government's stated ambition is for the UK to be an "AI maker, not an AI taker" — building domestic compute capacity rather than depending entirely on overseas infrastructure. Culham is the centrepiece of that programme.

Statera Energy: 500MW battery storage at Culham

Statera Energy has secured planning permission for a 500MW battery energy storage systemat Culham, located near the Culham substation and UKAEA campus. Statera has said the project will help provide power stability for Culham Campus as the UK's first AI Growth Zone. This makes Culham not just fusion plus AI, but also a clean-energy infrastructure location — with large-scale grid storage as a fourth element alongside UKAEA, AI compute and fusion research.

Sustainability and scale note:AI data centres are highly automated. Direct on-site permanent employment from a data centre is typically modest relative to the scale of capital investment — the broader relocation story is the ecosystem: AI companies, software engineering, scientific computing, energy infrastructure, grid and battery storage, construction, operations, cybersecurity and the existing fusion/robotics/engineering cluster around Culham. Grid access remains the single biggest blocker for AI data-centre projects. Reports have also raised concerns about water use and Culham's position in a seriously water-stressed region near proposed reservoir infrastructure. Separately, December 2024 reforms to the National Planning Policy Framework require local planning authorities to consider data-centre requirements, and major projects may use national infrastructure planning routes (Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects regime).

RACE: robotics for extreme environments

300+ engineers working on robotics where humans cannot go

RACE was established in 2014 and has grown to 300+ mechanical, electrical and cybernetics engineers. Its 2,000 sq m multifunctional workhall includes two 20-tonne gantry cranes, reconfigurable robotic cells, control rooms and NIST test lanes for unmanned vehicles. It designs, builds and operates robotics for fusion power plants, nuclear decommissioning and other environments where human access is impossible or unsafe.

Culham is not just fusion physics. It is one of the UK's most important centres for robotics in hazardous environments. RACE works across:

Skill areaRelevant roles
RoboticsRobotic systems, manipulation, teleoperation, autonomy
SoftwareControl systems, simulation, digital twins, operator interfaces
Mechanical engineeringTooling, fixtures, remote-maintenance hardware
Electrical and controlsMachine control, safety systems, sensors, actuators
Cybernetics and autonomyPerception, planning, human-machine interaction
Hazardous environmentsRemote operations, safety, nuclear decommissioning support

Jobs and careers at Culham

Culham supports a wide spectrum of roles — from plasma physicists and fusion engineers to software developers, AI specialists, roboticists, apprentices and professional services. Some roles require security and background checks (BPSS; occasionally DBS).

Role familyExample roles
Fusion sciencePlasma physicist, tokamak scientist, plasma modelling, experimental physicist
Software and computingPlasma code developer, scientific software engineer, simulation, digital twins, HPC, AI/ML
RoboticsRemote handling engineer, robotics engineer, autonomy, controls, teleoperation
Mechanical engineeringTest rigs, tooling, fusion components, systems engineering
Electrical and controlsControl and instrumentation, protection systems, diagnostics, safety
MaterialsIrradiation testing, metallography, materials characterisation, nuclear materials
Tritium and fuel cycleTritium operations, safety, process systems, regulated facilities
DecommissioningJET decommissioning, remote removal, waste planning, site redevelopment
ApprenticeshipsDigital, electronics, embedded systems, materials, mechatronics, project management
Professional servicesProcurement, finance, HR, programme management, commercial, estates

Getting to Culham

Culham Campus (OX14 3DB) is one of the most directly rail-connected science campuses in the UK. Culham station (GWR) is a short walk from the campus, with direct services to Oxford (~10 min), Didcot Parkway (~5 min, then Paddington ~40 min), and onward to the South West, West Midlands and Wales.

Bus routes serving the campus:

RouteConnects
45Abingdon to Templars Square, Cowley / Oxford direction
95 / 95BDidcot to Culham Campus

By road, the campus is off the A415 east of Abingdon, with access to the A34 and M40. Abingdon town centre is around 3 miles. The campus also has a growing cycling culture with Bike2Work events and cycling infrastructure.

See the Oxfordshire getting around guide for full commute matrices.

Where to live for Culham

Abingdon is the natural town base. Didcot is the rail and new-build base. Wallingford is the lifestyle base. Oxford is the city base.

LocationWhy it works
AbingdonMost obvious large-town choice: close, historic, good services, river, schools and Oxford access. OX13/OX14.
Didcot / Great Western ParkRail access, new-build supply, Science Vale infrastructure. Also useful for Harwell and Milton Park. OX11.
WallingfordThames-side market town, quieter than Didcot or Abingdon, lifestyle-led appeal. OX10.
Wantage and GroveGood for households also linked to Harwell or Milton Park. More space, market-town living. OX12.
OxfordCity amenities, hospitals and university links. Higher cost; quick train to Culham. OX1–OX4.
Milton Heights (Blaise Park)Adjacent to Milton Park; close to Culham station. OX13.
Clifton Hampden, Long Wittenham, Sutton CourtenayVillage options close to campus. More limited stock, strong local character.

Science Vale: Culham, Harwell and Milton Park

Culham is one of three complementary Science Vale employment anchors in southern Oxfordshire — and since the AI Growth Zone designation, a fourth layer has been added: large-scale AI infrastructure and compute. Together they make a dual-career household story credible: one person at Culham, another at Harwell, Milton Park, Oxford or Reading.

HubCore identityBest audience
Culham CampusFusion energy, robotics, materials, decommissioning, AI simulation, AI Growth Zone computeEngineers, physicists, robotics/software, energy and AI infrastructure specialists
Harwell CampusSpace, quantum, synchrotron science, national labs, vaccines, advanced materialsScientists, space engineers, quantum specialists, biotech and data professionals
Milton ParkLife sciences, biotech, commercial labs, healthtech, professional servicesBiotech workers, commercial science firms, lab users, business services