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Towards the crucial Paris summit for action on AI

Artificial Intelligence

Globally, the adoption rate of artificial intelligence in the media is relatively low compared to other industries.

Photo credit: Shutterstock

From February 6 to 11, 2025, France will host the Summit for Action on Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Paris, which will bring together heads of state and government, business leaders, representatives of civil society organisations, scientists and artists around issues related to the rise of AI.

Artificial intelligence (IA) is more than an industrial and technological revolution. It has the potential to bring about a profound paradigm shift in our societies, in how we relate to work, to information, to culture and even to language.

That means AI is not a neutral technology. It is a political and civic issue that requires intense international dialogue among the planet’s leaders, researchers, businesses and civil society.

France has shouldered the responsibility of building on the momentum generated by the United Kingdom and the Republic of Korea and of hosting the AI Action Summit on February 10 and 11, 2025, which will bring nearly one hundred heads of State and government and a thousand civil society actors in Paris from 100 countries.

The question we all face, as users around the world, as start-ups or large corporations, as researchers and as policy-makers, is ultimately a simple one: how do we get the AI transition right?

Technological development

The stakes are sky-high. We must enable AI to fulfil its initial promise of progress and empowerment in a context of shared trust that addresses the risks inherent to technological development.

Ahead of the Summit and its outcomes, we are focusing on three tangible priorities:

Firstly, access to AI must be guaranteed for everyone, so that each person in the world can benefit and develop new ideas, to realise the full potential of the technologies. In order to reduce the growing digital gap and curb the excessive concentration of the AI sector, we are launching a large-scale public interest AI initiative to foster the development and sharing of computing power, structured datasets, open tools and training for the talents of tomorrow. This project will be led by both public and private stakeholders.

Second, we must together prepare the two major transitions of our time: the environmental transition and the technological transition. While AI will, without a doubt, make a full contribution to fighting climate change and protecting ecosystems, it is currently on an untenable pathway when it comes to energy use.

The latest forecasts suggest that the energy needs of the AI sector will be ten times higher in 2026 than they were in 2023. That is not sustainable. In response, an international and multi-stakeholder coalition for sustainable AI will be launched at the summit to deepen research into the technologies’ environmental impact, evaluate models on that basis, define new standards and step up green investment at every link in the value chain.

Safety issues

Lastly, we need to collectively design an effective and inclusive governance framework for artificial intelligence. In this respect, the first challenge is that of substance. The agenda of international AI governance must be broad and not be limited to ethics and safety issues. Other areas are of key importance, including the protection of fundamental freedoms, intellectual property, fighting market concentration and access to data.

 The second challenge is that of method, which must be determinedly collective. Everybody talks about the inclusiveness of AI governance, but for the moment it is but a mirage. For example, only seven countries worldwide are truly participating in the major international AI initiatives, and 119 are totally absent from them. Moreover, private stakeholders and civil society also need to be closely involved in order to together define a common international artificial intelligence governance architecture.

France is not alone on the path to this Summit. More than 700 public and private partners, researchers and NGOs from across the world have been helping to prepare it for months. No subject will be skirted around, from the future of work to frugal AI, from the safety of models to innovation ecosystems, and from the need for linguistic – and therefore cultural – diversity to protection of privacy.

We are counting on your support. You are all invited to accompany us on the path to the AI Action Summit, so that together we can build, in an atmosphere of trust, an AI at the service of all, for a prosperous, more open and more inclusive world.

H.E Arnaud Suquet is Ambassador of France to Kenya and Somalia