NEW YORK, (Pakistan Point News - 17th Jul, 2026) UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Friday urged governments and technology companies to work together to ensure artificial intelligence (AI) benefits all countries.
He warned that without international cooperation the technology could widen global inequality instead of advancing sustainable development.
Speaking at the opening ceremony of the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, Guterres described AI as “humanity's greatest opportunity in the 21st century”, but cautioned that it could also become “one of its greatest risks”.
“Technology that will shape the future of humanity must be shaped by all of humanity”, he said, stressing that AI governance “cannot be governed by a handful of countries or companies” and that “every nation needs a seat at the table”.
The Secretary-General said AI has enormous potential to accelerate medical breakthroughs, transform education, strengthen food systems and create jobs, helping drive progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
But he warned that many developing countries remain at risk of being left behind.
“One-third of humanity is still offline,” he noted, while computing power, technical expertise and investment remain heavily concentrated in a small number of countries and companies.
Unless those disparities are addressed, AI could lead to “greater inequalities, greater divides in income, in opportunity, in security”.
To help bridge those gaps, Guterres said more than 20 countries, including China, have already nominated centres for a UN-supported Global Network for Exchange and Cooperation on AI Capacity Building.
He also announced that he will soon present recommendations for a Global Fund for AI and called on governments to support both initiatives.
The Secretary-General outlined three priorities for ensuring AI benefits everyone: expanding capacity in developing countries, establishing international safety standards, and making AI more environmentally sustainable.
He said developing countries should have the tools to build AI systems using their own data, languages and expertise, while governments should adopt common approaches to testing and risk management grounded in international law.
“Human rights must be protected” the UN chief said. “Humans must keep control over every life-and-death decision.” He also stressed that “no AI system should be put in a child's hands before it has been proven safe”.
On sustainability, Guterres called on major AI companies to disclose the environmental footprint of their systems and power their operations with renewable energy by 2030, urging governments to integrate clean energy for AI into national plans.
“The defining question is whether that transformation will reduce inequalities or reinforce them,” he said. “Whether it will concentrate power or expand opportunity.”