UN Secretary‑General Urges Worldwide AI Governance as Technology Outpaces Regulation
At the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance held in Geneva, Secretary‑General Antonio Guterres warned that artificial intelligence is evolving faster than the ability of governments and institutions to manage its risks. He called for the creation of a binding global system to steer AI development toward safety, fairness, and respect for human rights.
The Pace of Change Demands Coordinated Action
Guterres pointed out that AI is already reshaping economies, workplaces, electoral processes, and global security. According to the International Monetary Fund, AI‑driven automation could affect up to 40 % of jobs in advanced economies by 2030. Without clear rules, the Secretary‑General argued, these shifts risk deepening inequality and eroding trust in democratic institutions.
He stressed that international cooperation is not optional but urgent. “We have a narrow window of opportunity to put in place effective global protections,” Guterres said, noting that today’s decisions will shape whether AI becomes a force for progress or a source of heightened risk for future generations.
Environmental Footprint and the Push for Renewable Power
The UN chief also highlighted the growing environmental impact of AI‑intensive data centres. A 2023 study by the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that global data‑centre electricity consumption could rise from 200 TWh in 2022 to over 1 000 TWh by 2030 if current trends continue. Guterres urged technology firms to disclose the energy demands of their AI systems and to commit to powering all data centres with renewable electricity by 2030.
Such transparency, he argued, would allow policymakers to assess the true climate cost of AI and incentivise greener hardware design and algorithmic efficiency.
Ban on Autonomous Lethal Weapons: A Moral Imperative
Perhaps the most stark warning concerned the military use of AI. Guterres called for an outright prohibition on autonomous lethal weapons that can select and engage targets without meaningful human control. He referenced the UN Office for Disarmament Affairs’s ongoing discussions on lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS), noting that delegating life‑and‑death decisions to machines crosses a fundamental ethical line.
Human Rights Watch and the Campaign to Stop Killer Robots have documented that at least 30 states are actively researching or deploying LAWS, underscoring the urgency of a pre‑emptive ban.
Concrete Steps Toward a Global AI Governance Framework
To turn the call into action, Guterres outlined several measures that the international community could pursue:
- Negotiate a multilateral treaty under the auspices of the UN that sets baseline standards for AI safety, transparency, and accountability.
- Create an AI‑specific advisory panel within the UN Secretariat, composed of technical experts, ethicists, and representatives from civil society and industry.
- Establish a global registry for high‑risk AI systems, requiring developers to disclose training data sources, energy consumption, and risk assessments before deployment.
- Fund capacity‑building programs in developing nations to ensure they can participate in AI governance discussions and benefit from the technology responsibly.
- Encourage research into explainable AI and robust verification methods, with grants coordinated through UNESCO and the World Bank.
These steps, the Secretary‑General noted, would help align AI innovation with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly Goal 9 (Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure) and Goal 16 (Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions).
Why This Matters Now
The rapid diffusion of generative models, autonomous agents, and AI‑driven analytics means that policy lag can have immediate, tangible consequences—from biased hiring tools to deep‑fakes that undermine electoral integrity. By acting decisively, the international community can harness AI’s potential to accelerate medical breakthroughs, climate modelling, and inclusive education while safeguarding fundamental rights.
As Guterres concluded, “The future of AI should be written by humanity, not by algorithms alone.” The challenge ahead is to translate that vision into enforceable norms that keep technology in service of people, not the other way around.


