From the outset, Jersey presents its AI ambitions as a unifying leap forward. Yet as a sceptic, I smell a mix of public optimism and private leverage. The Digital Jersey-backed AI Council is pitched as a cross-sector accelerator—designed to align and amplify initiatives across government, finance, and private bodies. Tony Moretta, Digital Jersey’s chief executive and chair, calls this a “pivotal moment in the AI revolution” and warns that “progress is fragmented” if the effort remains piecemeal. The council says it will coordinate expertise to maximise benefits while mitigating risks, and to create a plan that draws on its members’ knowledge to help others in Jersey.
However, the claim of a single council coordinating a sprawling island-wide effort raises questions: who truly controls this coordination? what safeguards ensure data privacy and accountable decision-making? The council’s makeup includes the government, Jersey Finance, the Jersey Financial Services Commission, the Jersey AI Forum, the Jersey Office of the Information Commissioner, and the Institute of Directors, signaling a broad mandate but potentially competing priorities. The reality may hinge on how transparently the plan is drawn up and who gets to set the success metrics.
What is the AI Council and who sits on it?
The formation brings together both public bodies and private-sector voices. In addition to government, participants include Jersey Finance, the Jersey Financial Services Commission (FSC), the Jersey AI Forum, the Jersey Office of the Information Commissioner, and the Institute of Directors. Digital Jersey describes the council as a coordination body intended to align and amplify initiatives, facilitate collaboration, and share knowledge to maximise benefits while mitigating risks. Tony Moretta, who chairs the council, frames it as a way to consolidate efforts that have been fragmented across different organisations.
Why now, and what are the claimed benefits?
The leadership argues Jersey stands at a pivotal moment in the AI revolution, with many organisations advancing AI in isolation. The stated goal is to move from fragmented progress to coordinated action that taps diverse expertise. The plan is to draw on council members’ experience to help others in Jersey and to develop a plan that scales learning island-wide, aiming to accelerate responsible AI adoption while addressing potential downsides.
Where are the safeguards and potential risks?
As a sceptic, the big questions are governance, transparency, and accountability. Who truly controls the coordination, and how are competing priorities reconciled? Data privacy and regulatory oversight are central concerns, given the involvement of the Information Commissioner and FSC. Without clear, independent oversight and measurable benchmarks, the council could become a ceremonial umbrella for disparate, uncoordinated efforts rather than a genuine governance mechanism that mitigates risk and protects residents.