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Aims to position country as global leader in the governance
of AI technologies and includes plans for a white paper on AI
regulation.
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New National AI Research and Innovation Programme alongside
review of nation’s future computing capacity will help make
sure UK discovers and develops latest innovations
The UK today launches its first National Artificial Intelligence
(AI) Strategy to help it strengthen its position as a global
science superpower and seize the potential of modern technology
to improve people’s lives and solve global challenges such as
climate change and public health.
AI technologies underpin the tech and apps we use on a daily
basis - from helping us navigate around cities and stopping
online banking fraud to enabling voice recognition in smart
speakers. They help clinicians improve their diagnosis of
disease, are unlocking the potential for driverless cars and will
deliver thousands of unforeseen benefits in everyday life.
The UK’s first AI strategy - published on the third day of London
Tech Week - marks a step change in the country’s approach to the
fastest growing emerging technology in the world. There are plans
to launch a new national programme and approach to support
research and development, publish a white paper on the governance
and regulation of AI to build confidence in its use, plus moves
to support organisations in every region and sector capitalise on
the power of AI technologies.
The UK has a long and exceptional history in AI – from
codebreaker Alan Turing’s early work through to London-based
powerhouse DeepMind’s pioneering research which will enable
quicker and more advanced drug discovery. The country is ranked
third in the world for private venture capital investment into AI
companies (2019 investment into the UK reached almost £2.5
billion) and home to a third of Europe’s total AI companies.
Alongside measures to develop the next generation of AI talent
through continued support for postgraduate learning, retraining
and making sure children from wide backgrounds can access
specialist courses, the strategy will position the UK as a global
leader in raising the standards around the use of the technology
while building the case for deeper investor confidence. It
includes plans to:
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Launch a National AI Research and Innovation Programme to
improve coordination and collaboration between the country’s
researchers and help transform the UK’s AI capabilities,
while boosting business and public sector adoption of AI
technologies and their ability to take them to market.
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Support the government’s levelling up agenda by launching a
joint Office for AI (OAI) and UK Research & Innovation
(UKRI) programme aimed at continuing to develop AI in sectors
based outside of London and the South East. This would focus
on the commercialisation of ideas and could see, for example,
the government focusing investment, researchers and
developers to work in areas which currently do not use much
AI technology but have great potential, such as energy and
farming.
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Publish a joint review with UKRI into the availability and
capacity of computing power for UK researchers and
organisations, including the physical hardware needed to
drive a major roll out in AI technologies. The review will
also consider wider needs for the commercialisation and
deployment of AI, including its environmental impacts.
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Launch a consultation on copyright and patents for AI through
the Intellectual Property Office (IPO) to make sure the UK is
capitalising on the ideas it generates and that there is
clarity in what and who determines copyright. This could
include, for example, in situations where a creator was a
machine rather than a human or if an algorithm used someone
else’s patent.
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Trialing an AI Standards Hub to coordinate UK engagement in
setting the rules globally, and working with The Alan Turing
Institute to update guidance on AI ethics and safety in the
public sector and create practical tools to make sure the
technology is used ethically.
DCMS Minister said:
Artificial intelligence technologies generate billions for the
economy and improve our lives. They power the technology we use
on a daily basis and help save lives through better disease
diagnosis and drug discovery.
The UK already punches above its weight internationally and we
are ranked third in the world behind the USA and China in the
list of top countries for AI.
Today we’re laying the foundations for the next ten years’
growth with a strategy to help us seize the potential of
artificial intelligence and play a leading role in shaping the
way the world governs it.
The strategy comes in the week new data shows global investors
poured £13.5 billion into more than 1,400 UK private technology
firms between January and June this year - more than that
achieved in other large tech markets Germany, France and Israel
combined.
It follows government investment of more than £2.3 billion into
AI since 2014, and has a ten-year vision to transform the UK’s
capabilities in AI in parallel with the rapid technological
expansion around the world. Its aim is to position the UK as the
best place to live and work with AI, with clear rules, applied
ethical principles and a pro-innovation regulatory environment.
It focuses on three pillars which include making sure the country
invests in the long term growth of AI; that it benefits all
sectors and regions of the economy; and that it is governed
effectively by adequate rules which encourage innovation,
investment and protect the public and the country’s fundamental
values.
This includes measures to support skills, including the country’s
Turing Fellowships Programme, Centres for Doctoral Training and
postgraduate industrial masters and conversion courses, alongside
plans to support the National Centre for Computing Education to
ensure programmes for children in AI are accessible and reach the
widest demographic.
The government will also launch a Defence AI Strategy later this
year, the new Defence AI Centre through the Ministry of Defence
and begin engagement on the draft National Strategy for AI-driven
technologies in Health and Social Care through the NHS AI Lab.
Government Chief Scientific Adviser Sir said:
AI technologies have the capacity to fundamentally transform
many aspects of the way we live and work.
The UK is already a world leader in certain aspects of AI – and
this strategy helps to define how to enhance those capabilities
further to ensure that the UK can both develop and use AI for
the benefit of citizens.
Benevolent AI CEO and Co-Chair of Global Partnership on
Artificial Intelligence (GPAI) Joanna Shields said:
There has never been a more important time to invest in AI and
I’m delighted that the UK Government is recognising its
profound potential with the launch of the National Strategy on
AI.
A comprehensive strategy and vision for how we drive
innovation, economic growth, job creation and social good. AI,
successfully and ethically deployed, could become a
foundational technology for the future growth of our economy
and protecting our security and society.
Founder and CEO of DeepMind Demis Hassabis said: > AI could
deliver transformational benefits for the UK and the world -
accelerating discoveries in science and unlocking progress on key
challenges facing society. It’s great to see the scale of the
opportunity recognised in the National AI Strategy, and I’m
excited to see how it translates into action.
Institute Director and Chief Executive of The Alan Turing
Institute Professor Sir said:
The UK’s first national AI strategy is a major moment and we
need to capitalise on this momentum to advance the UK’s
international reputation in this broad discipline.
As the UK’s national institute for data science and AI, The
Alan Turing Institute is actively supporting the most ambitious
agenda of developing transformative new AI technologies.
We are proud of creating a dynamic, collaborative community of
diverse researchers and are growing world-leading capabilities
in responsible, safe, ethical and inclusive AI research and
innovation.
These technologies are already improving lives and their
prominence continues to grow in our society. To ensure they go
from strength to strength it’s critical we foster a
sustainable, inclusive, multidisciplinary UK AI ecosystem that
attracts people from all walks of life and allows them to
flourish.
Interim Chair of the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation Edwina
Dunn said:
AI has the potential to transform our society and economy. It
can be harnessed to fuel business creation, transform public
services, and make scientific breakthroughs. This depends on a
foundation of trust. I’m delighted to see the National AI
Strategy published today, setting out a plan to cement the UK’s
position as a global leader in the development and deployment
of trustworthy AI. Putting the right governance regime in place
will be crucial, and the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation
will soon be publishing an AI assurance roadmap to help build
an ecosystem of products and services for evaluating the
trustworthiness of AI systems.
Founding CEO of Tech Nation Gerard Grech said:
At Tech Nation, we’re thrilled with the announcement of this
new AI Strategy. AI is one of the UK’s fastest-growing tech
sectors, with venture capital investment in UK AI companies
currently at $3.3bn thus far in 2021, already surpassing the
$3bn invested in 2020.
Supporting and scaling the innovative tech businesses that are
shaping the future of our society and economy is at the heart
of our mission, which is why we are also delighted to be
welcoming 32 AI scaleups onto our Applied AI 3.0 program today,
focused on solutions to improve and transform key industries
such as healthcare, energy and finance, for the better.
President of techUK Jacqueline de Rojas said:
Today’s publication of the UK Government’s National AI Strategy
is an opportunity to strengthen the UK’s position as a leading
AI innovator.
Setting out a clear plan to build an AI future that is
inclusive and builds public trust in this transformative tech
is a clear imperative and also an opportunity. Government must
now focus on operationalising the strategy to ensure it
supports businesses and communities across all sectors and
regions to adopt and use AI”.
VP Enterprise EMEA at NVIDIA David Hogan said:
Today is an important step in furthering the UK’s strategic
advantage as a global leader in AI.
NVIDIA is proud to support the UK’s AI ecosystem with
Cambridge-1, the country’s most powerful supercomputer, and our
Inception incubator programme that includes more than 500 of
the UK’s most dynamic AI start-ups.
Senior Vice President Medicinal Science and Technology at GSK
Tony Wood said:
At GSK, we’re exploring the potential of Artificial
Intelligence and Machine Learning to uncover insights from
human genetics and genomics and help double success rates to
develop more and better medicines and vaccines needed by
patients in Britain and around the world.
We support the Government’s AI strategy and ambition to
maintain and build on the UK’s position as a world leader in
this field. It’s important that we have the right ecosystems
where we can carry out ground-breaking research quickly and
with world-class partners.
We already do a lot of this exciting work in the UK, including
our recently-announced collaboration with King’s College London
which aims to personalise care for patients with cancer. The
implementation of the strategy will help ensure the UK remains
a leading destination for AI innovation.
CEO of Rolls-Royce Warren East said:
We welcome the Government’s AI strategy because we believe AI
can be used for the good of society. For Rolls-Royce, it’s
critical to our net zero ambitions, the sustainability of our
business and helping our customers.
We’ve shared our AI breakthroughs in a free ethics and
trustworthiness toolkit called The Aletheia Framework, and are
collaborating with other sectors so we can improve together and
help build trust in AI.
Chief Digital and Innovation Officer of BT Group Harmeen Mehta
said:
We love the Government’s focus on AI and making the UK THE
place for nurturing and growing the best talent in AI and
machine learning.
Our own AI first approach in BT Digital, using deep data
science and data led insights to best serve our customers and
hyper personalise our services, means we’re well placed to
support this. BT is investing in every wave of AI and we’re now
registering more patents for AI than any other UK body.
Looking ahead, we’re building a powerful data and AI hub at BT
with over a hundred new roles for data scientists, data product
leads and data engineers in the next 12 months and partnering
with some of the best data organisations. We’re excited about
the impact we can have in making the UK the data and AI
technology hub that the world looks towards.
Director of Policy At BCS, the Chartered Institute for IT, Dr
Bill Mitchell OBE Said:
The new National AI Strategy gives the UK the best chance of
developing a world class workforce that is inclusive and
diverse and also with the skills and knowledge to ethically
build and deploy AI digital systems that will benefit everyone.
The National AI Strategy is going to be an essential component
of ensuring we really do build back better, because AI will be
key to figuring out how best to provide opportunities for
increasing economic productivity and growth, but also improving
public services to maximise their value to society.
Director of AI at NHSX Dr Indra Joshi said:
We welcome the National AI Strategy’s commitment to building up
the skills base for AI technologies, just as the NHS is looking
to strengthen its health and social care system, enabled by AI
technologies, to deliver better outcomes for the public.
Notes to editors
In January 2021, the AI Council published its ‘AI Roadmap’ providing 16
recommendations to the government on the strategic direction for
AI. This included the recommendation to develop a National AI
Strategy to build on the success of investments made through the
£1 billion AI Sector Deal.
The National AI Strategy follows:
- The Plan for Growth and
recent Innovation Strategy,
which recognise the need to develop a diverse and inclusive
pipeline of AI professionals with the capacity to supercharge
innovation.
- The Integrated Review
using technology to boost prosperity and security at home and
abroad, and shape the open international order of the future.
- The National Data
Strategy to harness the power of responsible data use to
boost productivity, create new businesses and jobs, improve
public services, support a fairer society, and drive scientific
discovery, positioning the UK as the forerunner of the next
wave of innovation.
- The Plan for Digital
Regulation which sets out the government’s approach to
regulating digital technologies in a way that drives prosperity
and builds trust in their use.
- A review of the UK’s large-scale computing
ecosystem and the interdependency of hardware, software and
skills.
It comes ahead of plans to deliver:
- The upcoming National Cyber Strategy to continue the drive
for securing emerging technologies, including building security
into the development of AI.
- A Digital Strategy to build on DCMS’s Ten Tech Priorities
to further set out the government’s ambitions in the digital
sector.
- A new Defence AI centre.
- The National Security Technology Innovation exchange (NSTIx)
to bring together National Security stakeholders, industry and
academic partners to build better national security capabilities
- The upcoming National Resilience
Strategy which will in part focus on how the UK will stay
on top of technological threats.
The government has invested more than £2.3 billion into AI across
a range of initiatives since 2014.
This includes:
- £250 million to develop the NHSX AI Lab to accelerate the
safe adoption of Artificial Intelligence in health and care
- £250 million for Connected and Autonomous Mobility (CAM)
technology through the Centre for Connected and Autonomous
Vehicles (CCAV)
- Investment in 16 new AI Centres for Doctoral Training at
universities across the country, backed by up to £100 million and
delivering 1,000 new PhDs over five years;
- A new industry-funded AI Masters programme and up to 2,500
places for AI and data science conversion courses. *This includes
up to 1,000 government-funded scholarships;
- Investment into The Alan Turing Institute and over £46
million to support the Turing AI Fellowships to develop the next
generation of top AI talent;
- Over £372 million of investment into UK AI companies through
the British Business Bank for the growing AI sector; £172 million
of investment through the UKRI into the Hartree National Centre
for Digital Innovation, leveraging an additional £38 million of
private investment into High Performance Computing.