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On February 18th, 2025, from 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM, our Global AI Center had the honor of participating in the United Nations’ Consultation with Stakeholders on Independent International Scientific Panel on AI and the Global Dialogue on AI Governance.
In my address, I focused on two pivotal questions:
💠 Standards and frequency for evidence-based assessments by the AI Panel
💠 Defining the strategic relationship and outcomes for the Global Dialogue on AI Governance
Our Global AI Center’s proposal rests on a Multi-Tiered Evidence-Based Assessment Framework, anchored by our AI Day Resolution — a cornerstone initiative designed to establish annual evaluations through:
💠 Comprehensive national and regional reports (via the Global AI Safety and Rights Repository)
💠 Periodic and biennial risk assessments, real-time alerts, and a robust AI-Human Collaborative Index
On April 02, 2025, the Global AI Center had the privilege of participating in the UN Multi-Stakeholder Hearings on the Independent International Scientific Panel on AI and the Global Dialogue on AI Governance.
I was honored to share our perspective as President of the Global AI Center, building on our earlier contributions in February-2025. Our interventions highlighted:
💠 Annual AI Governance Reports for greater transparency,
💠 Real-Time Risk Alert Mechanisms to address emergent AI crises,
💠 Prospective #SDG18 on Responsible AI, ensuring equitable progress, and
💠 Safe AI Exploration Off-World by collaborating with UN bodies to develop guiding principles that anticipate the ethical and regulatory challenges of AI-driven space missions.

Dear Excellencies and Esteemed Colleagues,
I address you today as President of the Global AI Center. Upon reviewing the Zero Draft, we commend its focus on transparency and multi-stakeholder inclusion — two pillars that promise a more robust AI ecosystem.
Throughout our prior dialogues, the Global AI Center has championed a prospective SDG #18 devoted to harnessing AI for equitable, inclusive progress.
Our legal and scientific analyses reveal key refinements that could further magnify this Draft’s impact.
With your indulgence, for the Paragraph 14, I hereby highlight four key additions designed to:
💠 Introduce enhanced monitoring tools for real-time data sharing,
💠 Explore novel or supplementary SDGs (including a prospective SDG #18 on Responsible AI),
💠 Require periodic AI impact assessments (annual or biennial), and
💠 Archive those assessments and reports in a publicly accessible Global AI Safety and Rights Repository.
Beyond this pivotal paragraph, we respectfully propose several structural refinements to ensure that ambitions on paper translate into concrete, future-ready policies:
1. Annual Reporting Obligation (Paragraphs 2 & 11)
💠 Suggested Addition: Require Member States to submit an annual AI governance report—encompassing societal, economic, and environmental impacts—to inform the Panel’s annual output (¶11) and upload it to a publicly accessible repository (e.g., the Global AI Safety and Rights Repository), thereby enhancing transparency and cooperation.
2. Risk Alert Mechanisms (Paragraph 2)
💠 Lacuna: While the text mentions “opportunities, risks, capabilities,” it lacks an explicit real-time alert system to manage emergent AI threats or crises.
💠 Suggested Addition: Introduce language that empowers the Panel to issue real-time advisories or risk bulletins, ensuring global awareness of critical AI developments.
3. The draft does not address advanced AI usage off-world, despite the accelerating reality of AI-driven space exploration.
That is why for the subject of Space Governance and AI we propose to
💠 Encourage collaboration with UN bodies to develop frameworks for AI in space, preempting ethical and regulatory blind spots.
Why These Changes Matter
By refining Paragraph 14 to explicitly reference the potential for new SDGs, we transform high-level aspirations into a forward-looking agenda. Moreover, addressing the lacunae aforementioned ensures that:
💠 AI is governed through robust, real-time oversight, rather than after-the-fact regulation.
💠 Member States have clear, measurable targets — embodied in the next generation of SDGs — that reflect the evolving nature of AI’s global footprint.
💠Space remains part of our planetary (and interplanetary) conversation, bridging the governance gap before AI extends fully into the cosmos.
Thank you for your time and your unwavering commitment..

A heartfelt thank-you to the co-facilitators, Permanent Representative of Costa Rica to the UN, Maritza Chan Valverde, and Permanent Representative of Spain to the UN, Héctor José Gómez Hernández, for orchestrating a highly productive session. Their leadership — and the active engagement of every stakeholder — continues to steer us toward meaningful, future-ready policies.
I’d also like to extend my gratitude to all esteemed colleagues who contributed.
We remain steadfast in our commitment to forging a safe, equitable global digital future— and look forward to continuing these vital conversations to achieve tangible, virtuous outcomes.

United Nations, online
Information Session with Stakeholders
to identify the terms of reference and modalities for the establishment and functioning of
the Independent International Scientific Panel on AI and the Global Dialogue on AI Governance
April 02, 2025 | 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. ET