UN launches AI Governance for Humanity Lab in Valencia

The lab aims to support network mobilisation, policy analysis, and development of cooperative tools for global AI governance.

The UN has launched a new AI governance lab in Valencia

The UN Office for Digital and Emerging Technologies has launched the AI Governance for Humanity Lab in Valencia to strengthen international cooperation on AI governance.

The Lab will focus on improving interoperability between national and regional governance frameworks and supporting practical implementation across regions and sectors. Its work will include network mobilisation, comparative policy analysis, and the development of cooperative tools for AI governance.

The launch brought together policymakers, researchers, industry practitioners, and AI governance experts for workshops and a public event. Discussions focused on two initial workstreams: interoperability in AI governance and the implementation of governance frameworks by private-sector actors.

The interoperability workstream will produce a white paper for UN member states, mapping the fragmented global AI governance landscape and outlining cooperation-oriented policy options ahead of the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva in July 2026.

A second workstream, focused on industry insights, will examine how AI governance frameworks are operationalised within companies and what challenges emerge in practice. The resulting analysis will inform discussions on safe, secure, and trustworthy AI, as well as transparency, accountability, human oversight, and human rights.

The Lab will convene global and regional meetings in Valencia, online, and in other cities. The UN said the meetings are intended to translate research and practice into actionable insights that can support multistakeholder cooperation and inform UN-led AI governance processes.

Why does it matter?

The Lab gives the UN’s AI governance agenda a more practical institutional mechanism. Its focus on interoperability responds to a central problem in global AI policy: national and regional frameworks are developing quickly, but often with limited coordination. By producing comparative analysis, policy options, and industry-focused insights, the Lab could help states and stakeholders reduce fragmentation and connect the Global Digital Compact’s AI commitments with implementation.

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