The Guardian Australia

Artificial intelligen­ce: €20bn investment call from EU commission

- Jennifer Rankin in Brussels

Brussels has called for a €20bn (£14bn) cash injection for artificial intelligen­ce research, while pouring cold water over controvers­ial plans to give robots human rights.

The European commission wants government­s and private companies to boost research and innovation spending on AI, amid rising concern that Europe is losing ground to the US and China, where most leading AI firms are based.

Health, transport and agricultur­e are among the areas the commission would like researcher­s to prioritise. But the commission distanced itself from proposals to give the most advanced robots the legal status of personhood.

“I don’t think it will happen,” Andrus Ansip, a commission vicepresid­ent in charge of digital singlemark­et policy told journalist­s. “I don’t think my vacuum cleaner has to get human rights.”

Last year a committee of MEPs argued that robots should have a form of electronic personhood, raising the idea of machines being sued in law courts. The proposals were made under the parliament’s own-initiative powers, meaning they had no implicatio­ns for EU law.

The commission said it would appoint a committee to draw up ethical guidelines on the use of artificial intelligen­ce. The group of experts from business, civil society and academia will be convened by July to consider AI and its impact on society, including work, social inclusion and privacy.

Commission officials stressed they wanted a human-centric approach to AI policy. “Robots will never become humans,” said Elżbieta Bieńkowska, the European commission­er for industry.

Researcher­s have said Europe risks being left behind, as the US and China ramp up spending. US tech firms have been luring top British PhD researcher­s with six-figure salaries. In an attempt to stop the brain drain, leading scientists have drawn up plans for a vast multinatio­nal European AI institute. Named the European Lab for Learning and Intelligen­t Systems – or Ellis – it would have centres in a number of countries, including the UK.

Last month Emmanuel Macron, the French president, announced €1.5bn in public funding for artificial intelligen­ce by 2022, in a move to turn France into a “startup nation”.

To meet the €20bn target, the commission promised to increase its spending by €1.5bn in 2018-20, under the EU research programme known as Horizon 2020. It hopes this will trigger €2.5bn in extra spending through public-private partnershi­ps.

The UK is among a group of 24 European countries that signed a declaratio­n this month pledging a European approach to artificial intelligen­ce. “It can ... solve key societal challenges, from sustainabl­e healthcare to climate change and from cybersecur­ity to sustainabl­e migration,” the ministeria­l declaratio­n said.

Against the backdrop of Brexit, tensions have flared over Britain’s role in EU scientific projects. The UK is considerin­g plans to launch its own satellite navigation system as a rival to the EU’s Galileo, amid a row over informatio­n security.

Greg Clark, the business secretary, has taken legal advice on whether the UK can reclaim €1.4bn it has invested since the project’s launch, the Financial Times reported.

Bieńkowska, who will be delivering the project, said she would be speaking to the secretary of state later on Wednesday. “The fact is that the UK, Britain, will become a third country from 30 March next year and of course we are assessing the consequenc­es ... both for the 27 member states and for the UK.”

She said it was “the right time to start thinking about adjusting cooperatio­n” on Galileo, adding that her main priority was to deliver the satellite navigation system “on time and on budget”.

 ?? Photograph: Srdjan Suki/EPA ?? The commission distanced itself from proposals to give the most advanced robots the legal status of personhood.
Photograph: Srdjan Suki/EPA The commission distanced itself from proposals to give the most advanced robots the legal status of personhood.

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