Modernising government IT systems: addressing technical debt amidst AI growth

UK government faces technical debt challenges as AI adoption grows, demanding modernisation and skill enhancement across public sector tech systems.

Recent analysis from Cloudhouse highlights technical debt as a key challenge for UK public sector IT departments. As artificial intelligence (AI) adoption increases, government organisations are recognising the need to modernise their technology estates.

The Cloudhouse State of Technical Debt Report found that nearly seven in ten government IT leaders say their existing systems are hindering AI integration efforts. The report also notes continued reliance on Microsoft Windows environments across public sector organisations, indicating the scale of infrastructure and application transformation required.

Internal capability is identified as another challenge. Seventy-five percent of public sector organisations report a lack of skills needed to modernise ageing systems, while more than half say technical debt is addressed reactively rather than through structured transformation programmes.

Operational resilience and compliance are also central concerns. Half of public sector organisations report difficulties in demonstrating compliance during audits, and a majority experience configuration drift across their technology estates. The findings point to a need for ongoing visibility and control to support transformation and governance objectives.

Cloudhouse, founded in 2010, focuses on application estate management across complex environments. Its solutions include Alchemy, Foundry, and Guardian.

Alchemy enables business-critical and incompatible applications to run on modern supported environments without modification.

Foundry automates application packaging at scale across Windows and Linux environments.

Guardian provides continuous visibility of configuration states and drift, supporting audit requirements and risk management.

Cloudhouse lists organisations including GE Healthcare, National Australia Bank, and HM Government among its users. The company positions its tools as supporting system stability, modernisation efforts, and compliance management across application estates.

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