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Speech: Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden’s speech to the UN General Assembly: 22 September 2023

Cabinet Office

September 22
23:15 2023

Mr President,

As we meet here this evening millions of people in Morocco and Libya continue to struggle with the aftermath of a devastating earthquake and catastrophic flood.

Let me extend the sympathy of the British people to all those who have lost loved ones.

Our search and rescue teams have been deployed in Morocco and we have increased our humanitarian support for Libya.

We will continue our support - alongside many other nations represented here in the weeks and months to come.

This week, nations have gathered here to recommit to addressing the biggest challenges we face.

Climate change, with catastrophic weather events telling us to act, now.

The Sustainable Development Goals and how to get them back on track after Covid.

Migration, with millions crossing borders and dangerous seas, at the mercy of human traffickers.

And Russias brutal invasion of Ukraine an attack on a sovereign member of the United Nations by a Permanent Member of its Security Council.

The most heinous assault imaginable on everything this organisation stands for, and was founded to prevent.

With consequences felt not just by the brave people of Ukraine, but by millions more across the globe.

Those hit by food shortages particularly in developing countries - are Putins victims too.

Russia could end this war tomorrow. Putin could end this war tomorrow. That is what the world demands.

But until that happens, the United Kingdom will stand alongside Ukraine.

Whatever it takes.

For weeks, for months - if necessary, for years.

Because if these United Nations - in which the United Kingdom believes, and helped to found - are to count for anything, it is surely for the cardinal principle that aggression cannot, and must not pay.

These are the issues of the moment.

But I want to focus on another challenge.

A challenge that is already with us today, and which is changing - right now - all of our tomorrows.

It is going to change everything we do education, business, healthcare, defence - the way we live.

And it is going to change government and relations between nations fundamentally.

It is going to change this United Nations, fundamentally.

Artificial Intelligence the biggest transformation the world has known.

Our task as governments is to understand it, grasp it, and seek to govern it.

And we must do so at speed.

Think how much has changed in a few short months.

And then think how different this world will look in five years or ten years time.

We are fast becoming familiar with the AI of today, but we need to prepare for the AI of tomorrow.

At this frontier, we need to accept that we simply do not know the bounds of possibilities.

We are as Edison before the light came on, or as Tim Berners-Lee before the first email was sent.

They could not - surely - have respectively envisaged the illumination of the New York skyline at night, or the wonders of the modern internet.

But they suspected the transformative power of their inventions.

Frontier AI, with the capacity to process the entirety of human knowledge in

Seconds, has the potential not just to transform our lives, but to reimagine our understanding of science.

If - like me - you believe that humans are on the path to decoding the mysteries of the smallest particles, or the farthest reaches of our universe, if you think that the Millenium Prize Problems are ultimately solvable, or that we will eventually fully understand viruses, then you will surely agree that by adding to the sum total of our intelligence at potentially dizzying scales.

Frontier AI will unlock at least some of those answers on an expedited timetable in our lifetimes.

Because in AI time, years are days even hours.

The frontier is not as far as we might assume.

That brings with it great opportunities.

The AI models being developed today could deliver the energy efficiency needed to beat climate change, stimulate the crop yields required to feed the world, detect signs of chronic diseases or pandemics, better manage supply chains so everyone has access to the materials and goods they need, and enhance productivity in both business and governments.

In fact, every single challenge discussed at this years General Assembly and more could be improved or even solved by AI.

Perhaps the most exciting thing is that AI can be a democratising tool, open to everyone.

Just as we have seen digital adoption sweep across the developing world, AI has the potential to empower millions of people in every part of our planet, giving everyone, wherever they are, the ability to be part of this revolution.

AI can and should be a tool for all.

Yet any technology that can be used by all can also be used for ill.

We have already seen the dangers AI can pose: teens hacking individuals bank details; terrorists targeting government systems; cyber criminals duping voters with deep-fakes and bots; even states suppressing their peoples.

But our focus on the risks has to include the potential of agentic frontier AI, which at once surpasses our collective intelligence, and defies our understanding.

Indeed, many argue that this technology is like no other, in the sense that its creators themselves dont even know how it works.

They cant explain why it does what it does, they cannot predict what it will - or will not - do.

The principal risks of frontier AI will therefore come from misuse, misadventure, or misalignment with human objectives.

Our efforts need to preempt all of these possibilities - and to come together to agree a shared understanding of those risks.

This is what the AI Safety Summit that the United Kingdom is hosting in November will seek to achieve.

Despite the entreaties we saw from some experts earlier in the year, I do not believe we can hold back the tide.

There is no future in which this technology does not develop at an extraordinary pace.

And although I applaud leading companies efforts to put safety at the heart of their development, and for their voluntary commitments that provide guardrails against unsafe deployment, the starting gun has been fired on a globally competitive race in which individual companies as well as countries will strive to push the boundaries as far and fast as possible.

Indeed, the stated aim of these companies is to build superintelligence.

AI that strives to surpass human intelligence in every possible way.

Some of the people working on this think it is just a few years away.

The question for governments is how we respond to that.

The speed and scale demands leaders are clear-eyed about the implications and potential.

We cannot afford to become trapped in debates about whether AI is a tool for good or a tool for ill; it will be a tool for both.

We must prepare for both and insure against the latter.

The international community must devote its response equally to the opportunities and the risks - and do so with both vigour and enthusiasm.

In the past, leaders have responded to scientific and technological developments with retrospective regulation.

But in this instance the necessary guardrails, regulation and governance must be developed in a parallel process with the technological progress.

Yet, at the moment, global regulation is falling behind current advances.

Lawmakers must draw in everyone - developers, experts, academics - to understand in advance the sort of opportunities and risks that might be presented.

We must be frontier governments alongside the frontier innovators.

The United Kingdom is determined to be in the vanguard, working with like-minded allies in the United Nations and through the Hiroshima G7 process, the Global Partnership on AI, and the OECD.

Ours is a country which is uniquely placed.

We have the frontier technology companies.

We have world-leading universities.

And we have some of the highest investment in generative AI.

And, of course, we have the heritage of the Industrial Revolution and the computing revolution.

This hinterland gives us the grounding to make AI a success, and make it safe.

They are two sides of the same coin, and our Prime Minister has put AI safety at the forefront of his ambitions.

We recognise that while, of course, every nation will want to protect its own interests and strategic advantage, the most important actions we will take will be international.

In fact, because tech companies and non-state actors often have country-sized influence and prominence in AI, this challenge requires a new form of multilateralism.

Because it is only by working together that we will make AI safe for everyone.

Our first ever AI Safety Summit in November will kick-start this process with a focus on frontier technology.

In particular, we want to look at the most serious possible risks such as the potential to undermine biosecurity, or increase the ability of people to carry out cyber attacks, as well as the danger of losing control of the machines themselves.

For those that would say that these warnings are sensationalist, or belong in the realm of science-fiction, I simply point to the words of hundreds of AI developers, experts and academics, who have said - and I quote:

Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war.

I do not stand here claiming to be a

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