World Watch/Egypt/Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence · Egypt

Artificial Intelligence - Egypt

Guidelines onlyEgyptian Charter for Responsible AI (2023, voluntary) and National AI Strategy 2025–2030, overseen by the National Council for Artificial Intelligence (NCAI) and the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology (MCIT); a binding AI law is still in draft.

Egypt currently governs AI through non-binding instruments: the Egyptian Charter for Responsible AI (adopted April 2023) and the National AI Strategy (first edition 2021, second edition 2025–2030). There is no comprehensive in-force AI statute; a dedicated AI Law to convert the Charter's voluntary principles into binding requirements is under development but not yet enacted. Oversight is led by the NCAI and MCIT, with a planned Center for Responsible AI.

Voluntary ethics charter

The National Council for AI adopted the Egyptian Charter for Responsible AI in April 2023 — a non-binding set of principles (e.g., do-no-harm, fairness, transparency, accountability, human oversight) adapted to the local context and aligned with UNESCO's AI ethics recommendation.

National AI Strategy 2025–2030

The second-edition National AI Strategy, issued by MCIT and the NCAI, is built on six pillars (Governance, Technology, Data, Infrastructure, Ecosystem, Talent) and sets goals such as expanding the AI talent base and 'sovereign AI' capabilities; it commits to developing a regulatory/AI-law system rather than itself being binding law.

Draft AI law (not yet enacted)

A dedicated AI Law is being developed by MCIT and the NCAI, intended to convert the Charter's voluntary principles into binding obligations and establish statutory oversight; as of 2026 it remains in draft and is not in force.

Governance bodies

AI policy is coordinated by the National Council for Artificial Intelligence (NCAI), established under MCIT; the strategy provides for a Center for Responsible AI to handle ethical oversight, compliance monitoring, and guidance.

International alignment

Egypt developed its responsible-AI approach with UNESCO support, including a Readiness Assessment Methodology under UNESCO's Recommendation on the Ethics of AI, anchoring its guidelines in international ethics frameworks.

No comprehensive binding regime today

Unlike the EU AI Act model, Egypt has no horizontal AI statute in force; current obligations rest on voluntary guidelines plus general laws (e.g., the Personal Data Protection Law No. 151 of 2020) until the draft AI law is passed.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →