Denmark enhances digital security and innovation with expanded cyber strategy
The strategy also seeks to improve digital education and workforce skills, underscoring Denmark’s commitment to secure digital transformation and compliance.
The Danish government has relaunched the National Cyber Security Council (NCSC) with an expanded mandate to strengthen digital security across critical sectors while advancing AI capabilities. That effort is part of a larger initiative that includes the country’s €100 million National Strategy for Digitalisation (NSD), which supports AI development through regulatory sandboxes and guidelines aligned with the EU’s AI Act.
The NCSC will promote public-private partnerships, enhance data sharing between government, businesses, and academia, and protect critical infrastructure from rising cyber threats. In tandem, the government’s Artificial Intelligence Guideline (AIG) project helps companies and public authorities adopt AI securely, offering a framework to test and integrate AI technologies within a regulatory safe zone. These combined efforts boost digital transformation while ensuring strong cybersecurity and legal compliance.
The NCSC’s new mission addresses growing cybersecurity challenges, particularly in light of geopolitical instability, such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The council aims to foster collaboration between national security agencies and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) by assembling experts from key sectors, including businesses, universities, and municipalities.
The Danish government’s investment in AI development is also supported by regulatory sandboxes that allow companies to innovate safely within the EU legal frameworks like GDPR and the AI Act. The broader NSD also targets improvements in digital education, workforce skills, and business transformation, ensuring that a solid security and regulatory oversight foundation underpins Denmark’s push for innovation.