Libya's National AI Strategy 2026–2030: Bold Government Targets and What They Signal Globally
Libya is joining a growing list of nations treating artificial intelligence as a national competitiveness imperative. On National Technology Day, Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah announced the country's National AI Strategy for 2026–2030 alongside a National Charter for AI Ethics — a two-part move that pairs ambition with accountability.
The strategy sets measurable targets that signal serious intent, not just headlines.
Key Takeaways
- 80% of government institutions to adopt AI solutions by 2030
- 50% of all government transactions to be automated
- 70% of citizens to receive digital identities
- 10,000 public sector workers to be trained in advanced technologies
- 100 AI-focused startups to be supported
Libya also created a dedicated ministerial portfolio for the digital economy and AI — a structural decision that signals this strategy has an owner in government, not just an announcement.
The AI ethics charter places a firm boundary on autonomous decision-making: AI must support human judgment, not replace it — particularly in healthcare, justice, and security. Transparency, fairness, accountability, and the protection of digital rights are core principles.
For organizations tracking global AI adoption patterns, Libya's strategy reflects a broader trend: governments in emerging markets are moving from passive observers to active architects of national AI frameworks. Whether Libya can execute against these targets given its ongoing political complexity is an open question — but the direction is clear.
🔗 Read the full article on The North Africa Post
Stay in Rhythm
Subscribe for insights that resonate • from strategic leadership to AI-fueled growth. The kind of content that makes your work thrum.
More from Thrum
Additional pieces exploring adjacent ideas
