The relaunched UK AI Regulation Bill – a step towards statutory regulation of AI in the UK

  • Legal Development 14 March 2025 14 March 2025
  • UK & Europe

  • Regulatory & Investigations - Technology Risk

Discussions regarding AI regulation in the UK are gathering momentum following the reintroduction of the UK Artificial Intelligence (Regulation) Bill (the AI Bill).

Originally introduced as a Private Members Bill in November 2023 in the House of Lords under the previous Conservative Government, the AI Bill returned to square one with the election of the Labour Government in July 2024. However, the AI Bill has since been relaunched in the House of Lords and passed its first reading on 4 March 2025.

This Article considers the key features of the AI Bill and how they fit in the context of AI regulation globally.

Key Features of the AI Bill

The AI Bill broadly defines AI as technology which is capable of perceiving environments through the use of data, interpreting data using automated processing designed to approximate cognitive abilities, and making recommendations, predictions or decisions – all with a view to achieving a specific objective.

The AI Bill has three central objectives:

  1. Creation of an AI Authority
  2. Regulatory Principles
  3. Public Engagement

Creation of an AI Authority

To date, the UK has taken a principles-based approach to regulating AI, with sector-specific regulators including the FCA and Ofcom supervising the development and use of AI.

In contrast, the AI Bill seeks to introduce a central AI Authority to oversee the regulation of AI, assess emerging AI risks, and support the innovation of AI with a view to ensuring alignment in approach across sectors.

Regulatory Principles

The AI Bill sets out five principles for regulating AI, effectively codifying the UK’s principles-based approach to regulating AI. The principles are as follows:

  1. Safety, security, and robustness.
  2. Appropriate transparency and explainability.
  3. Fairness.
  4. Accountability and governance.
  5. Contestability and redress.

The AI Bill similarly seeks to regulate businesses which are developing and / or deploying AI solutions. Businesses are to adhere to the five principles above and ensure AI solutions are applied in inclusive, non-discriminatory ways.

Finally, the AI Bill requires businesses which are developing and / or deploying AI solutions to appoint a dedicated AI Officer with responsibility for ensuring the safe, ethical, unbiased, and non-discriminatory use of AI solutions.

Public Engagement

The AI Bill requires the AI Authority to engage with the public when considering the future development and implementation of AI-related regulation. This is with a view to developing regulations which match the opportunities and risks presented by AI.

Next Steps for the AI Bill

The AI Bill has an uncertain future despite passing its first reading. As a private members bill in the House of Lords, it does not have the backing of the UK Government, and it is not guaranteed cross-party support in the House of Commons.

Indeed, the provisions of the AI Bill do not sit comfortably with the UK Government’s innovation-friendly, pro-business outlook regarding AI.

The UK Government published its AI Opportunities Action Plan on 13 January 2025 (the Action Plan). The Action Plan contains recommendations to foster AI innovation in the UK which fall into the following categories:

  1. Support for innovators.
  2. Invest in making the UK a leading AI customer.
  3. Attract global talent to establish AI companies in the UK.

Similarly, the UK Government declined to sign the Statement on Inclusive and Sustaibale Artificial Intelligence at the Paris AI Summit in February 2025 (the Declaration). Signatories to the Declaration pledged to make AI “open, inclusive, transparency, ethical, safe, secure, and trustworthy”.

Taken together, the Action Plan and the UK Government’s reticence to sign the Declaration that the UK Government’s priorities lie with business and innovation rather than regulation.

The AI Bill and the Global AI Regulatory Landscape

The AI Bill represents a halfway house in contrast to AI regulatory frameworks globally.

In comparison to the EU AI Act, the AI Bill is decidedly light touch. While both the EU AI Act and the AI Bill feature the introduction of a central AI supervisory body, the EU AI Act’s regulatory framework is significantly more comprehensive than the regulatory principles in the AI Bill. Similarly, the AI Bill does not follow the EU AI Act in introducing a strict liability regime for breaches of AI regulations.

The AI Bill is more akin to the approach taken in the US. While some states have elected to introduced AI regulations, the federal government has thus far taken a principles-based approach reflective of that in the UK.  The Trump Administration has overturned a Biden-era Executive Order aimed at regulating AI and has instead introduced an AI Action Plan aimed at deregulating AI to foster innovation.

The AI Bill highlights the growing tension between pro-regulation and pro-innovation approaches. Whether or not the AI Bill enters the statute book will likely depend on how the Uk Government resolves that tension.

End

Areas:

  • Legal Developments

Additional authors:

Adam Leese

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