Europe moves ahead on artificial intelligence regulation as UK and US fall behind

New research finds the UK lagging behind Europe in efforts to regulate artificial intelligence, with the United States also trailing leading jurisdictions.

Governments are accelerating efforts to respond to the rapid rise of artificial intelligence, but a growing gap is emerging between Europe and other major economies. New research examining global regulatory responses concludes that the UK is trailing in the race to regulate artificial intelligence, with the United States also falling behind leading jurisdictions.

The findings highlight that European regulators are advancing more quickly and decisively on dedicated artificial intelligence rules. In contrast, the UK and United States are depicted as slower to establish comprehensive artificial intelligence governance frameworks, despite the technology’s fast deployment across sectors.

The research underlines increasing pressure on policymakers in the UK and United States to clarify expectations for safe and ethical artificial intelligence use. As Europe pushes ahead, organisations operating internationally may face a more complex compliance landscape, needing to align with stricter European standards while navigating comparatively less developed regimes in the UK and United States.

65

Impact Score

Europe’s Artificial Intelligence challenge is structural dependence

Europe has talent, research strength, and rising investment in Artificial Intelligence, but startups remain reliant on American infrastructure, platforms, and late-stage capital. The argument centers on digital sovereignty, interoperability, and ownership as the conditions for building durable European champions.

Community backlash slows Artificial Intelligence data center expansion

Political resistance, regulatory scrutiny, and rising energy and water concerns are complicating the build-out of large Artificial Intelligence data centers across the United States. The pressure is increasing costs, delaying projects, and adding fresh risks to the economics behind Generative Artificial Intelligence infrastructure.

House panel advances export controls after China report

The House Foreign Affairs Committee moved export control legislation after a House Select Committee report detailed China’s use of illegal means to build its Artificial Intelligence and semiconductor sectors. The measure is aimed at chip smuggling and Artificial Intelligence model theft.

Intel repurposes scrap dies to expand CPU supply

Intel is repurposing wafer-edge and lower-yield silicon that would normally be discarded into sellable CPUs as industry demand outpaces supply. The strategy reflects a market where customers are willing to buy lower-tier parts to secure any available capacity.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.