Wednesday, June 10, 2026

London startup Deliverance AI partners with HPE and NVIDIA to support enterprise AI deployments

Deliverance AI believes the problem is not the technology itself but the lack of control, governance and oversight needed to run AI across large organisations.
Illustration by ChattyLion/AI

Deliverance AI, a London-founded technology company focused on enterprise artificial intelligence, has emerged from stealth with £5.5 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR), more than 30 employees, and six enterprise customers within three months of incorporation.

The company has developed what it describes as an “Agentic Operating System” designed to help government organisations, regulated industries, and large enterprises deploy AI agents inside their own environments while maintaining control over data, models, and decision-making processes.

According to Deliverance AI, many organisations have struggled to move AI projects beyond pilot stages because they lack the systems needed to govern and manage AI at scale. The company says its platform provides a governed runtime for AI agents, along with tools for model routing, audit trails, cost attribution, and oversight of AI activity.

The platform is already being used by customers to automate professional services workflows, support sales and operational functions, and manage finance and business process tasks. In one customer deployment, Deliverance AI reported a nearly 75% reduction in costs while also reducing the time required to begin and complete tasks.

A key feature of the platform is its model-routing capability, which directs tasks to different AI models based on factors such as cost, performance, risk, and governance requirements. The company says this approach helps customers avoid dependence on a single AI provider, cloud platform, or infrastructure vendor.

Deliverance AI was founded by Chief Executive Officer Mick McNeil, who previously held leadership positions at Microsoft, Northern Data Group, and Logicalis. The company states that its UK and European headquarters mean it is not subject to the US CLOUD Act, a point it presents as important for organisations with strict data residency and sovereignty requirements.

The platform can be deployed across public cloud environments, sovereign infrastructure, on-premises systems, and air-gapped networks. Deliverance AI says customer data remains within chosen environments unless customers decide otherwise. The company currently serves organisations in the United Kingdom, Europe, the Middle East, and North America.

Deliverance AI is working with HPE and NVIDIA to support enterprise AI deployments. HPE provides the private cloud infrastructure through HPE Private Cloud AI, while NVIDIA technology forms part of the computing and software foundation used by the platform.

The system runs on NVIDIA DGX infrastructure, including DGX systems and DGX Spark. It also uses NVIDIA software components such as NemoClaw blueprints, OpenShell, and other agentic AI tools designed for private and regulated environments.

McNeil said enterprises have invested heavily in AI infrastructure but still lack the operational layer needed to manage, govern, and measure AI agents effectively. He described Deliverance AI’s platform as an operating system for agentic AI, designed to provide accountability and oversight from the start.

Representatives from NVIDIA and HPE also said the partnership reflects growing demand for sovereign AI deployments, where organisations maintain control over their data, models, and AI-driven decision-making processes.

The company’s launch comes as businesses increasingly seek ways to move AI projects from experimentation into secure production environments.

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