AI Action Summit: Statement on Inclusive and Sustainable Artificial Intelligence for People and the Planet 

February 2025

Statement

Note: In line with the approach of previous Summits, this Statement relates to civil applications and use of AI only

1. Participants from over 100 countries, including government leaders, international organisations, representatives of civil society, the private sector, and the academic and research communities gathered in Paris on 10 and 11 February 2025 to hold the AI Action Summit. Rapid development of AI technologies represents a major paradigm shift, impacting our citizens, and societies in many ways.

In line with the Paris Pact for People and the Planet, and the principles that countries must have ownership of their transition strategies, we have identified priorities and launched concrete actions to advance the public interest and to bridge digital divides through accelerating progress towards the SDGs.

Our actions are grounded in three main principles of science, solutions – focusing on open AI models in compliance with countries frameworks – and policy standards, in line with international frameworks. 

2. This Summit has highlighted the importance of reinforcing the diversity of the AI ecosystem. It has laid an open, multi-stakeholder and inclusive approach that will enable AI to be human rights based, human-centric, ethical, safe, secure and trustworthy while also stressing the need and urgency to narrow the inequalities and assist developing countries in artificial intelligence capacity-building so they can build AI capacities. 

3. Acknowledging existing multilateral initiatives on AI, including the United Nations General Assembly Resolutions, the Global Digital Compact, the UNESCO Recommendation on Ethics of AI, the African Union Continental AI Strategy, and the works of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the Council of Europe and European Union, the G7 including the Hiroshima AI Process and G20, we have affirmed the following main priorities: 

  • Promoting AI accessibility to reduce digital divides; 
  • Ensuring AI is open, inclusive, transparent, ethical, safe, secure and trustworthy, taking into account international frameworks for all 
  • Making innovation in AI thrive by enabling conditions for its development and avoiding market concentration, driving industrial recovery and development 
  • Encouraging AI deployment that positively shapes the future of work and labour markets and delivers opportunity for sustainable growth 
  • Making AI sustainable for people and the planet 
  • Reinforcing international cooperation to promote coordination in international governance 

To deliver on these priorities: 

  • Founding members1


     Kenya, Germany, Chile, Finland, Slovenia, France, Nigeria, Morocco, India  
    have launched a major Public Interest AI Platform and Incubator, to support, amplify, decrease fragmentation between existing public and private initiatives on Public Interest AI and address digital divides. The Public interest AI Initiative will sustain and support digital public goods and technical assistance and capacity building projects in data, model development, openness and transparency, audit, compute, talent, financing and collaboration to support and co-create a trustworthy AI ecosystem advancing the public interest of all, for all and by all. 
  • We have discussed, at a Summit for the first time and in a multi-stakeholder format, issues related to AI and energy. This discussion has led to sharing knowledge to foster investments for sustainable AI systems (hardware, infrastructure, models), to promoting an international discussion on AI and environment, to welcoming an observatory on the energy impact of AI with the International Energy Agency, to showcasing energy-friendly AI innovation. 
  • We recognize the need to enhance our shared knowledge on the impacts of AI in the job market, though the creation of network of Observatories, to better anticipate AI implications for workplaces, training and education and to use AI to foster productivity, skill development, quality and working conditions and social dialogue. 

4. We recognize the need for inclusive multistakeholder dialogues2
In line with the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)  
and cooperation on AI governance. We underline the need for a global reflection integrating inter alia questions of safety, sustainable development, innovation, respect of international laws including humanitarian law and human rights law and the protection of human rights, gender equality, linguistic diversity, protection of consumers and of intellectual property rights. 

We take notes of efforts and discussions related to international fora where AI governance is examined. As outlined in the Global Digital Compact adopted by the UN General Assembly, participants also reaffirmed their commitment to initiate a Global Dialogue on AI governance and the Independent International Scientific Panel on AI and to align on-going governance efforts, ensuring complementarity and avoiding duplication. 

5. Harnessing the benefits of AI technologies to support our economies and societies depends on advancing Trust and Safety. We commend the role of the Bletchley Park AI Safety Summit and Seoul Summits that have been essential in progressing international cooperation on AI safety and we note the voluntary commitments launched there. We will keep addressing the risks of AI to information integrity and continue the work on AI transparency. 

6. We look forward to next AI milestones such as the Kigali Summit, the 3rd Global Forum on the Ethics of AI hosted by Thailand and UNESCO, the 2025 World AI Conference and the AI for Good Global Summit 2025 to follow up on our commitments and continue to take concrete actions aligned with a sustainable and inclusive AI. 


Related documents:

Signatories: 

1. Armenia 

2. Australia 

3. Austria 

4. Belgium 

5. Brazil 

6. Bulgaria 

7. Canada 

8. Chile 

9. China 

10. Croatia 

11. Cyprus 

12. Czechia 

13. Denmark 

14. Djibouti 

15. Estonia 

16. Estonia 

17. Finland 

18. France 

19. Germany 

20. Greece 

21. Hungary 

22. India 

23. Indonesia 

24. Ireland 

25. Italy 

26. Japan 

27. Kazakhstan 

28. Kenya 

29. Latvia 

30. Lithuania 

31. Luxembourg 

32. Malta 

33. Mexico 

34. Monaco 

35. Morocco 

36. New Zealand 

37. Nigeria 

38. Norway 

39. Poland 

40. Portugal 

41. Romania 

42. Rwanda 

43. Senegal 

44. Serbia 

45. Singapore 

46. Slovakia 

47. Slovenia 

48. South Africa 

49. South Korea 

50. Spain 

51. Sweden 

52. Switzerland 

53. Thailand 

54. The Netherlands 

55. UAE 

56. Ukraine 

57. Uruguay 

58. Vatican 

59. UNESCO 

60. UN 

61. European Commission (and the 27 member states) 

62. AU Commission 

63. OECD 

64. Council of Europe 

65. PMIA 

66. Center for Democracy and Technology 

67. BEUC The European Consumer Organisation 

68. Institute of Advanced Study 

69. INRIA 

70. Sciences Po 

71. Hugging Face 

72. Partnership on AI 

73. ALAI (Latin American Association on Internet)