- Liverpool City Region’s first AI Summit a resounding success
- Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology Peter Kyle delivers video message
- Mayor Steve Rotheram signs MOU with University of Liverpool and STFC
- Keynote speaker, IBM UK and Ireland CEO Dr Nicola Hodson: ‘Tech is moving faster than it ever has, but slower than it ever will’
Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology Peter Kyle today hailed Liverpool City Region’s leadership in harnessing AI to improve lives and drive economic growth.
In a video message to an international AI Summit in Liverpool, the UK Cabinet member said the government would support communities across the country to follow the Liverpool City Region’s example of harnessing AI to grow the economy, create new jobs, attract investment and improve lives for local people.
He added:
“Together we can shape the future of this technology to build a fairer, safer, more prosperous society for everyone.”
Hosted by multilingual interactive digital humans, the summit brought together the brightest minds in AI, including global industry leaders, cutting-edge researchers, and innovative local businesses, who highlighted how Artificial Intelligence is being used to solve real-world challenges – from transforming healthcare to revolutionising education – and how it can drive a fairer, more inclusive society.
The landmark event also showcased Liverpool City Region’s world-leading Artificial Intelligence expertise, while addressing ethical issues and setting out an inspiring vision for the future of ‘AI for Good’ in the UK.
Keynote speaker, IBM UK and Ireland CEO Dr Nicola Hodson told delegates we were in ‘one of the most transformational periods in human history’ in which ‘tech is moving faster than it ever has, but slower than it ever will’.
“It is clear we are moving from AI hype to AI reality,” she said, adding that ‘AI is augmenting – not replacing – human intelligence’
Hailing from Widnes, the former University of Liverpool student, now techUK Deputy President and Department of Science, Industry and Technology board member, said:
“We have a huge AI opportunity in the Liverpool City Region and beyond. The economic promise of AI continues to grow as adoption accelerates.
“There is little doubt we are already in the age of AI. According to McKinsey, AI could add $4.4 trillion of value annually to global GDP by 2030. Just to put that into perspective, in just 6 years from now, the AI industry will be worth nearly double the value of the UK’s economic output of 2023.
“And the UK’s own AI industry is expected to grow to £800 billion by 2035, according to UK Government research.
“With a 20% growth rate, Liverpool is the fastest-growing city economy in the UK – and this area is well set to become a leader in responsible AI.”
She said IBM was working with the University of Liverpool to drive research on AI, big data and High-Performance Computing and this year the partnership had delivered AI assistants to accelerate chemical discovery. Meanwhile, the STFC Hartree Centre at Daresbury had helped develop AI that makes breast cancer analysis 25 times faster and AI software that predicts bowel cancer with 92% accuracy.
But she added AI needs the right governance and guardrails, with ethics, fairness and reliability essential and with the right tools in place to ensure data is managed, trusted and secure.
Liverpool City Region Mayor Steve Rotheram signed a Memorandum of Understanding at the summit between the Combined Authority, the University of Liverpool and the UK’s Science and Technology Facilities Council.
The agreement is to develop Meta Liverpool: created from sources such as high-resolution drone footage and transport models, and which allows the impact of policies to be tested before being deployed.
Mayor Rotheram said:
“Today hasn’t just been about showcasing cutting-edge technology – it’s been about showing the world what the Liverpool City Region is all about: innovation with heart, technology with purpose and a vision of progress that leaves no one behind.
“Artificial intelligence is a perfect example of this. Not the fancy algorithms – or shiny tech bit – but because, with the right guardrails in place, it can empower us to solve real problems, improve people’s lives, and build a fairer, more equitable society.
“At Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, AI is helping doctors diagnose illnesses faster, giving our kids the best chance of recovery. At the Hartree Centre, we’ve got the UK’s most powerful industrial supercomputer, driving breakthroughs in manufacturing, climate science, and more. And at the University of Liverpool, AI is helping us create new materials at record speed – transforming industries from renewable energy to healthcare.
“But the real value of innovation isn’t just the technology it creates – it’s about its impact on people too. We’re part of a groundbreaking pilot programme, one of the largest, not just in England but in Europe, bringing cutting-edge AI to schools across our area.
“During the pandemic, the region’s Civic Data Cooperative helped make Liverpool a pioneer in mass COVID testing, showing how AI can save lives. And with our new Life Sciences Investment Zone, we’re expecting £800 million of investment and around 8,000 new jobs in health innovation.
“Collaboration is key to all of this. That’s what makes this region special. The Liverpool City Region has a knack for punching above its weight. It’s in our DNA. When I was growing up, this was a region known for its resilience and creativity.
“We didn’t just follow trends; we set them. Today, we’re taking that same spirit into the digital age. But leadership comes with responsibility.
“As AI develops, we need to make sure it reflects our values of fairness, inclusivity, and sustainability. AI should empower people, not replace them. It should build trust, not breed suspicion. And it should create opportunities for everyone.
“Together, we will use those ideas to cement the Liverpool City Region as a global leader in ethical, impactful artificial intelligence.”
Introducing the all-day event, Liverpool City Region Combined Authority Chief Executive Katherine Fairclough said AI was transforming the world faster than most people could have imagined and that the city region was faced with a choice of how to respond: ‘let it happen to us or make it work for us and our residents’.
She told the Summit:
“It’s creating incredible opportunities, solving problems, and allowing us to think of solutions to challenges that once seemed insurmountable.
“From Alder Hey Children’s Health Park, where AI assists in patient care and innovation, to CENTURY Tech, whose AI technology is transforming education by personalising learning for students across our schools, we are seeing how AI can make education more inclusive, healthcare more effective, and industry more efficient.
“We are committed and energised with the right people and institutions lined-up to directly contribute to establishing our region as a global AI powerhouse.
“We stand on the edge of a new technological age and we have made a choice. Let’s use AI to shape our future – a future that is smarter, fairer, and more compassionate. And we will do that through the strength of collaboration and leadership.”
Other speakers included Marina Tcharnetsky, Chief Business Development Officer at the Artificial Intelligence Centre Hamburg (ARIC) and Professor Mark Thompson, co-founder of high-profile California-based Psi-Quantum, one of the world’s leading quantum computing companies with its only European base in the Liverpool City Region.
Delivered in partnership with techUK at Liverpool BOXPARK, the summit explored how AI can be harnessed to enrich lives and tackle some of the most pressing issues facing society today.
The Liverpool City Region is already home to the UK’s most powerful supercomputer dedicated to industrial research and is at the forefront of AI innovation that serves people and communities. The Mayor recently launched a pilot of AI-powered technology in local primary schools in partnership with CENTURY Tech. The scheme is one of the largest in Europe.
From tackling childhood cancer to tracking space debris, developing new electric vehicle batteries and saving the sight of people with diabetes in remote corners of the world, city region scientists are using Artificial Intelligence as a force for good.
They used AI and Big Data to help the UK emerge from the pandemic and are keeping us safe from the next viral threat.
The summit is expected to spark collaborations and drive new ideas about how AI can support the UK’s wider ambitions to be at the cutting edge of ethical technology. With AI’s role in shaping everything from smart cities to the future of work, this forum is set to ignite conversations that will help to influence the direction of AI for years to come.
The list of speakers also included Professors Andy Cooper, Katie Atkinson and Iain Buchan from the University of Liverpool, Connected Places Catapult CEO Erika Lewis and senior representatives from Microsoft, Weightmans LLP, Innovate UK, techUK and some of the city region’s most innovative AI companies.