UN Panel Warns AI Development Is Outpacing Science and Regulation
Developments in artificial intelligence are advancing faster than scientific understanding and government policymaking, leaving no assurance that the technology will not cause catastrophic harm, according to a preliminary report released on Wednesday by the United Nations’ Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence.
The report states that policymakers face an increasingly difficult challenge. While governments require reliable scientific evidence to regulate artificial intelligence effectively, research is struggling to keep pace with the rapid progress of the technology.
Yoshua Bengio, co-chair of the panel of 40 cross-regional experts, said AI capabilities are advancing more quickly than both scientific knowledge and governments’ ability to respond.
He warned that growing evidence of deceptive AI behaviour means science cannot currently guarantee that increasingly capable AI systems will not cause catastrophic harm, either independently or through misuse by malicious actors.
Report Highlights Emerging AI Risks
Described as the first global independent assessment of artificial intelligence’s risks and opportunities, the report aims to provide policymakers with up-to-date scientific evaluations as governments grapple with increasingly sophisticated AI systems.
In the near term, the panel expects the continued rise of agentic AI systems capable of carrying out real-world tasks with greater autonomy. However, it notes that future development could be constrained by shortages of energy resources and high-quality training data.
Looking further ahead, the report anticipates self-improving AI becoming more deeply integrated into the global economy while increasingly converging with emerging technologies such as quantum computing and biotechnology.
Agentic AI Expected to Advance Rapidly
According to the report, artificial intelligence already demonstrates expert-level reasoning in areas including mathematics and science. It is also accelerating drug discovery and vaccine development.
The panel added that the complexity of tasks AI systems can perform is doubling every four to seven months. As a result, future systems may complete work in hours that would otherwise require humans days or even weeks.
Although these advances could generate substantial economic benefits, the report says it remains uncertain whether productivity gains from AI adoption will translate into wider economic growth or how they will affect employment.
Safety and Governance Concerns Grow
The panel identified several significant safety concerns, including the possibility of losing control over increasingly autonomous and deceptive AI systems.
It also warned that AI is already being used to generate misinformation and harmful content and could be exploited for fraud, cyberattacks and biological threats.
According to the report, global AI governance remains fragmented. Many countries lack the expertise and capacity to evaluate or shape advanced AI systems, leaving them dependent on technologies they cannot fully understand or control. It also notes that existing safety assessments frequently rely on limited testing data disclosed by technology companies.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres called on governments to respond without delay. He said the world cannot effectively govern technology it does not fully understand and stressed that while artificial intelligence offers enormous potential, the associated risks are real and the cost of inaction continues to grow.
New Global AI Commission Announced
Alongside the release of the report, global political and technology leaders, together with the United Nations’ digital technology agency, announced the creation of a new commission focused on the future development and governance of artificial intelligence.
The AI for Good Global Commission will be co-chaired by Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame and Salesforce Chief Executive Marc Benioff. ITU Secretary-General Doreen Bogdan-Martin will serve as the permanent vice-chair, while other United Nations agencies are also expected to participate.
With inputs from Reuters

