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Anthropic Signs Deal with Federal Government

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Date Published
1 Apr 2026
Priority Score
4
Australian
Yes
Created
1 Apr 2026, 06:00 am

Authors (1)

Description

On AI safety and economic data tracking.

Summary

Anthropic has entered a formal memorandum of understanding with the Australian government to share findings on emerging AI model capabilities and collaborate on joint safety evaluations. The agreement mirrors international frameworks established with US and UK safety institutes, positioning Australia as a key partner in monitoring frontier AI risks and domestic adoption trends. This partnership is significant for global governance as it integrates a leading frontier lab into Australia's national safety strategy, even as the country lacks formal AI-specific legislation. The collaboration also highlights a focus on tracking the economic impact of AI and the physical infrastructure requirements for its development in the region.

Body

Anthropic has sign a memorandum of understanding to share its economic index data with the Australian government to help track artificial intelligence ‌adoption across the economy, and ‌its ‌impact on workers and jobs. Under ‌the agreement, the Claude ⁠maker will share findings on emerging AI model capabilities and risks, participate in joint safety evaluations, and collaborate on research ​with Australian universities. Anthropic said it would also target investments in ⁠data centre infrastructure and energy across Australia. "Australia's investment in AI safety makes it a natural partner for responsible AI development," Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said in Canberra, where he met Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, "This memorandum of ​understanding gives our collaboration ⁠a formal foundation." The deal mirrors ⁠similar agreements with safety institutes in the United States, Britain ​and Japan. Australia currently has no specific ‌AI legislation. ⁠ The centre-left Labor government has said it would rely on existing laws to manage emerging AI risks ‌while introducing voluntary guidelines amid privacy and safety concerns. In its National AI Plan released in December, Labor outlined a roadmap ​to ramp up AI adoption across the economy, attract data centre investment, and build AI skills to ‌support jobs ⁠as the technology ​becomes more integrated into daily life.