UN Chief Urges Global AI Standards to Prevent Fragmentation Risks

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned of growing AI fragmentation due to incompatible global standards and technological rivalry. He called for establishing global interoperability and science-led guardrails to protect human rights and accelerate safe innovation. Guterres emphasized that shared benchmarks would allow startups to scale confidently while ensuring safety travels with the technology. He also proposed a Global Fund on AI to prevent many countries from being excluded from the AI age by building skills and infrastructure worldwide.

Key Points: UN Calls for Global AI Interoperability to Mitigate Risks

  • AI fragmentation risks global progress
  • Need for shared safety benchmarks
  • Science-led guardrails protect rights
  • Global AI Fund for inclusive access
2 min read

UN chief calls for global interoperability to mitigate AI fragmentation risks

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warns of AI fragmentation, advocating for global standards and a Global AI Fund for inclusive innovation.

"Without a common baseline, fragmentation wins, with different regions and different countries operating under incompatible policies and technical standards. - Antonio Guterres"

New Delhi, Feb 20

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Friday cited AI fragmentation risks, calling for global interoperability standards for better outcomes at the 'India AI Impact Summit 2026' here.

Guterres said that today, international cooperation is difficult. "Technological rivalry is growing. Without a common baseline, fragmentation wins, with different regions and different countries operating under incompatible policies and technical standards," he warned.

Addressing the Summit, he said that when we agree on how to test systems and measure risk, we create interoperability.

"So a startup in New Delhi can scale globally with confidence because the benchmarks are shared and safety can travel with technology," he noted.

Guterres also called for science-led AI guardrails to protect people and accelerate innovation.

"Once we understand what AI systems can do and what they cannot, we can move from rough measures to smarter, risk-based guardrails. Guardrails that protect people, uphold human rights, and preserve human agency," he told the gathering.

According to the UN Secretary-General, AI guardrails must build confidence and give business clarity so innovation can move faster in the right direction.

"Science-led governance is not a brake on progress. It is an accelerator for solutions. It helps us identify where AI can do the most good and the fastest, and it helps us anticipate early impacts from risks for children to labour markets to manipulation at scale, so countries can prepare, protect, and invest in people," he highlighted.

AI innovation is outpacing our collective ability to fully understand it -- let alone govern it. If we want AI to serve humanity, policy cannot be built on guesswork, hype, or disinformation. We need facts we can trust and share across countries and sectors, he stressed.

According to him, AI must be accessible to everyone.

"But without investment, many countries will be logged out of the AI age. That's why I am calling for a Global Fund on AI -- to build skills, data, affordable computing power and inclusive ecosystems everywhere," he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone working in tech policy, I appreciate the call for science-led guardrails. Too often, regulation is either too restrictive or too lax. A global framework based on evidence could prevent a race to the bottom while still allowing for rapid innovation.
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Priya S
The Global Fund for AI is a fantastic idea! So many talented students in smaller Indian cities and towns have the ideas but lack access to computing power and data. We cannot let the AI revolution become another thing that widens the gap between the haves and have-nots.
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Vikram M
While the intent is good, I'm skeptical. Look at climate agreements or internet governance. Getting major powers like the US, China, and the EU to agree on a common baseline seems like a pipe dream. India should focus on building its own strong, ethical standards first.
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Rohit P
Protecting human agency is key. We've seen how social media algorithms can manipulate. We need these guardrails before AI becomes even more powerful. Jai Hind to the UN chief for saying this in New Delhi!
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Michael C
"Policy cannot be built on guesswork, hype, or disinformation." This is the most important line in the whole speech. The public discourse on AI is filled with fear-mongering and unrealistic promises. We need calm, factual, and global cooperation. A timely message.

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