Technology editor & reporter
The UK and US have not signed an international agreement on artificial intelligence (AI) at a global summit in Paris.
The statement, signed by France, China and India among other countries, pledges an โopenโ, โinclusiveโ and โethicalโ approach to the technologyโs development.
Downing Street said the UK โhadnโt been able to agree all parts of the leadersโ declarationโ and would โonly ever sign up to initiatives that are in UK national interestsโ โ but has not spelt out which parts of the communique the UK objected to.
Earlier, US Vice President JD Vance told delegates in Paris that too much regulation of artificial intelligence (AI) could โkill a transformative industry just as itโs taking offโ.
Vance told world leaders that AI was โan opportunity that the Trump administration will not squanderโ and said โpro-growth AI policiesโ should be prioritised over safety.
He said that this would require regulation which fosters AI development โrather than strangles itโ.
Vance added that leaders in Europe should especially โlook to this new frontier with optimism, rather than trepidationโ.
His comments appear to put him at odds with French President Emmanuel Macron, who defended the need for further regulation.
โWe need these rules for AI to move forward,โ Macron said at the summit.
The UK has previously been a champion of the idea of AI safety, with then prime minister Rishi Sunak holding the worldโs first AI Safety Summit in November 2023.
Andrew Dudfield, head of AI at fact-checking organisation Full Fact, said the governmentโs decision not to sign the Paris communique put that in jeopardy.
โBy refusing to sign todayโs international AI Action Statement the UK Government risks undercutting its hard-won credibility as a world leader for safe, ethical and trustworthy AI innovation,โ he said.
What does the agreement say?
The statement signed by 60 countries sets an ambition to reduce digital divides by promoting AI accessibility, and ensuring the techโs development is โtransparentโ, โsafeโ as well as โsecure and trustworthyโ.
โMaking AI sustainable for people and the planet,โ is listed as a further priority.
The agreement also notes that AI energy use โ which experts have warned could rise to use as much as small countries in years to come โ was discussed at a summit for the first time.
โLooking at the summit declaration, itโs difficult to pinpoint what exactly in that statement the government disagrees with,โ said Michael Birtwistle, associate director at the Ada Lovelace Institute.
Addressing the UKโs decision not to sign it, the Prime Ministerโs official spokesperson told reporters that โthese discussions are pretty liveโ and noted that the UK has โworked closely with the French throughout this processโ.
โThey remain one of our closest partners in all areas of AI,โ they said.
Balancing acts
It comes amid discussions at the summit about the impact of AI development on society, the environment and governance.
Policy-makers, executives and diplomats have been mulling ways to capture the economic benefits of AI innovation, while addressing the technologyโs risks.
It was kicked off by Macron posting a compilation of jokey deepfake clips of himself in popular films and TV series on social media.
โThis summit is focused on action, and that is exactly what we need right now,โ said European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen on Tuesday.
She said Europeโs approach to AI, which has been championed throughout the summit, would also emphasise innovation, collaboration and โembrace the power of open sourceโ technology.
The meeting is also taking place at a time of growing trade tensions between the US and Europe.
President Tump has decided to impose tariffs on steel and aluminium imports into the US, a move that will affect the UK and EU.
Itโs understood the UK will not immediately retaliate, as it seeks to tread a delicate path of maintaining good relations with the Trump administration while also building closer ties with the EU.