The Singaporean government released its updated National AI Strategy 2.0 on Dec. 4, outlining how it plans to embrace innovation and tackle the challenges associated with artificial intelligence (AI).Â
Singapore structured its AI strategy into three distinct systems consisting of 10 âenablersâ that drive those systems and 15 action steps to make the system work. Its first AI strategy was introduced in 2019.
The updated planâs systematic approach focuses on three main areas of its society, including what it calls âactivity drivers,â âpeople and communities,â and âinfrastructure and environment.â
Building a smart nation
Among the action steps is Singaporeâs plan to develop new AI âCenters of Excellenceâ across companies operating in the country to foster âsophisticated AI value creation and usage in key sectors.â
The updated AI plan also has benchmarks of equipping governmental agencies with âspecialized knowledge, technical capabilities, and regulatory toolsâ and âsharpeningâ AI proficiency in all Singaporean public officers.
According to the vision, Singapore plans to use its government capacity to create resources to support AI adoption in the public sector.
Additionally, it said it plans to boost its quantity of âAI practitionersâ or local experts to 15,000 through scaling up AI-specific training programs, technology and AI talent pipelines, and that it âremains openâ to global talent.
The report said that various tech training programs centered around AI development have placed over 2,700 individuals in âgood jobsâ to date.
Increasing compute
Singapore, like many other countries around the world, said it also plans to increase its computing capacity.
To do this, Singapore said it plans to deepen partnerships with major players in the industry, including chipmakers and cloud services providers, and support local Singapore-based compute industry firms.
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It plans to implement its action steps over the next 3â5 years to support its ambitions in the AI sector.
Singapore follows other countries in its push to embrace AI. Recently, at its AI Safety Summit, the United Kingdom said it plans to invest 300 million pounds into obtaining and operating two AI supercomputers to boost its own footprint in the global AI race.Â
OpenAI, one of the worldâs leading AI developers, announced a partnership with G42 in Dubai to expand its reach into the Middle East region.
Meanwhile, the United States â one of the worldâs top chip manufacturing hubs â has started tightening export controls targeting certain countries on its technology to develop and power high-level AI systems.
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