UN Chief Urges Global Unity on AI Governance at Delhi Summit

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres addressed the Global AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, calling for international cooperation to govern artificial intelligence. He emphasized that policy must be based on trusted facts and science, not hype or guesswork. Guterres highlighted the newly formed UN Independent International Scientific Panel on AI, designed to provide a shared baseline of analysis for member states. He warned that without a common approach, fragmented rules would raise costs, weaken safety, and widen global divides.

Key Points: UN Chief Calls for Science-Led Global AI Governance

  • Science-led AI governance is an accelerator
  • Need global cooperation to prevent fragmentation
  • Independent UN panel to close AI knowledge gap
  • Policy must be built on facts, not guesswork
3 min read

Global AI Impact Summit: UN Chief calls for global unity, says science-led governance an accelerator for solutions

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urges international cooperation and evidence-based policy for AI at the Global AI Impact Summit in New Delhi.

"Less hype, less fear, more facts and evidence. - Antonio Guterres"

New Delhi, February 20

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Friday called for utilising Artificial Intelligence for global good and mitigate challenges being faced by humanity. He urged countries to come together and prepare, protect, and invest in people. Today international cooperation is difficult. Trust is strained, and technological rivalry is growing.

He made the remarks while speaking at the Global AI Impact Summit 2026 here in the national capital on the role of science in international AI governance.

"We are barrelling into the unknown. AI innovation is moving at the speed of light, outpacing our collective ability to fully understand it. If we want AI to serve humanity, policy cannot be built on guesswork. It cannot be built on hype or disinformation. We need facts we can trust and share across countries and across sectors. Less noise, more knowledge", he said.

Guterres highlighted the steps taken by the United Nations around AI noting the recently formed AI Panel.

He said, "The United Nations is building a practical architecture that puts science at the centre of international cooperation on AI. And it starts with the Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence. This panel is designed to help close the AI knowledge gap and assess the real impacts of AI across economies and societies so countries at every level of AI capacity can act with the same clarity. It is fully independent, it is globally diverse, and it is multidisciplinary because AI touches every area of every society. And I'm delighted that the General Assembly of the United Nations confirmed the 40 experts I proposed to Member States. Now the real work begins on a fast track to deliver a first report ahead of the global dialogue on AI governance in July. The panel will provide a shared baseline of analysis, helping member states move from philosophical debates to technical coordination, and anchor choices in evidence."

He called science-led governance an accelerator for solutions and a way to make progress safer, fairer, and more widely shared.

"It helps us identify where AI can do the most good the fastest. And it helps us anticipate impacts early from risks for children to labour markets to manipulation at scale. So countries can prepare, protect, and invest in people. Today international cooperation is difficult. Trust is strained, and technological rivalry is growing. Without a common baseline, fragmentation wins, with different regions and different countries operating under incompatible policies and technical standards. A patchwork of rules will raise costs, weaken safety, and widen divides. Science is a universal language. Guided by independent panel and the global dialogue on AI governance, we can align our technical baselines. When we agree on how to test systems and measure risk, we create interoperability", the UN Chief added.

Guterres underlined that the goal should be to make humans control a technical reality, not a slogan--with the process requiring meaningful human oversight.

"It requires clear accountability, so responsibility is never outsourced to an algorithm. People must understand how decisions are made, challenge them and get answers. The message is simple. Less hype, less fear, more facts and evidence. Guided by science, we can transform AI from a source of uncertainty into a reliable engine for the sustainable development goals. Let us build a future where policy is as smart as the technology it seeks to guide", Guterres said in his concluding remarks.

The India AI Impact Summit 2026, the first global AI summit hosted in the Global South, has brought together policymakers, industry leaders, academics and civil society representatives to deliberate on responsible AI governance and inclusive technological advancement.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Arjun K
"Less noise, more knowledge" - perfectly said. The hype around AI in media is crazy. Finally, someone is talking about evidence-based policy. Hope this scientific panel includes experts from IITs and our tech startups. They understand ground realities.
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Rohit P
Good speech, but will countries actually listen? Look at climate change agreements. Big powers do what they want. If AI governance becomes another arena for US-China rivalry, the rest of us suffer. India should lead the Global South bloc on this.
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, the point about "clear accountability" is crucial. We can't have algorithms making life-altering decisions without transparency. Hope this leads to real standards, not just more reports that sit on a shelf.
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Vikram M
The focus should be on how AI can solve *our* problems - better farming forecasts, diagnosing diseases in rural clinics, managing traffic in our cities. Global governance is fine, but local application is what matters. Jai Hind!
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Karthik V
I appreciate the call for unity, but respectfully, the UN's track record on enforcing agreements is weak. The "patchwork of rules" he warns about is already here. India needs its own strong, ethical AI framework that protects our data sovereignty and jobs.
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Ananya R

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