FIA urges European Parliament to extend EU AI Act deliberation

Businessman,On,Blurred,Background,Using,Digital,Artificial,Intelligence,Interface,3d

Share this content

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Euralarm has undersigned a joint industry statement on the EU AI Act, supported by the Fire Industry Association, urging the European Parliament to consider a number of key principles and take more time for deliberation.

Together with other undesigning organisations, Euralarm has has followed the work of the EU Institutions on Artificial Intelligence, supporting the European Commission’s original intent for a risk-based approach to AI.

AI will constitute a key technology for economic development in the European Union, and its integration into industrial processes is a priority for the EU and its Member States. The AI Act has the opportunity to set out a first-of-its-kind legislative framework on Artificial Intelligence and will shape how AI is developed and deployed in Europe.

The European Parliament has so far suggested many important modifications to the original proposals, and FIA said it applaudsthe constructive spirit that has been prevalent during the negotiations on a Draft Report whilst remaining concerned by the possibility of significantly deviating from the AI Act’s original proposal and goals to establish a risk-based approach to AI that fosters innovation and uptake in Europe.

The European Parliament is being urged to ensure that any possible new requirements and amendments to the Act are introduced taking into account their technical feasibility, impact on legal certainty, and the ability of AI developers, deployers, and users to comply with them.

As the Rapporteurs and Shadow Rapporteurs work to finalise a compromise text to form the European Parliament position, Euralarm and the FIA have urged them to consider the following key principles and take more time for deliberation, ensuring that the AI Act:

  • Maintains the risk-based approach of the original proposal while defining “high-risk” in a way that reflects it;
  •  Allocates responsibilities properly along the value chain and allows contractual freedom to do so;
  • Includes in Annex III only use-cases that are truly high-risk;
  • Uses a definition of AI that is recognised by industry, is in line with OECD work, and does not include non-AI tools;
  • Establishes legal certainty for the extraterritorial application of the Act’s scope and effect on the EU’s international partners;
  • Ensures that the AI Act does not overlap or create competing obligations with existing legislation; and
  • Avoids uncertainty for further investment, trade, and innovation.

Signatories:

  • ACEA – European Automobile Manufacturers Association
  • AFNUM – The French Alliance of Digital Industries
  • BSA | The Software Alliance
  • BusinessEurope – The Confederation of European Business
  • CECIMO – European Association of the Machine Tool Industries and related Manufacturing Technologies
  • EuroCommerce
  • Euralarm
  • EGMF – European Garden Machinery Federation
  • INFOBALT Lithuania
  • Insurance Europe
  • ITI – Information Technology Industry Council
  • LIKTA – Latvian Information and Communications Technology Association
  • MedTech Europe
  • SEPE – Federation of Hellenic ICT Enterprises
Newsletter
Receive the latest breaking news straight to your inbox