DSIT's AI Assurance Roadmap Takes its Next Step: techUK to Lead the Industry Advisory Group of AI Assurance Consortium
The launch of the AI Assurance Consortium, chaired by BCS and supported by DSIT, marks a significant step forward in professionalising AI assurance at scale. techUK is proud to be part of the Consortium and wider roadmap as a delivery partner, leading the Industry Advisory Group and ensuring that the voice of industry, the companies building, buying and deploying AI is embedded throughout the process.
The Consortium has a clear mandate for its first year: develop a voluntary code of ethics for AI assurance practitioners; build a skills and competencies framework that maps what good looks like across different assurance roles; and map the data and information access requirements that assurance providers need from their clients. These are the building blocks for a future professional certification scheme, with AI auditing, the most mature and consequential corner of the market, as the likely starting point.
Artificial intelligence is moving fast. The systems being deployed today in financial services, healthcare, justice and beyond are making decisions that affect people's lives, livelihoods, and rights. We know how to build AI and of equal importance, we continue our work to address the market barriers of the UK's AI assurance ecosystem. We know how timportant this area is and we are committed to doing more of it.
That is what AI assurance is for. Not a compliance checkbox, but the active, evidence-based work of evaluating, measuring and communicating whether AI systems are behaving safely, fairly, and as intended. It is the infrastructure of justified trust. And right now, the UK is building that infrastructure and building it well.
The UK's AI assurance market is nascent but growing fast, worth over £1 billion in GVA in 2024, with the potential to reach nearly £19 billion by 2035 if the right conditions are created. Over 12,000 people already work across the UK’s AI assurance ecosystem. And yet the sector faces real structural challenges: a shortage of professionals with the right combination of technical, legal, ethical and sector-specific skills; no agreed competency framework; no clear career pathways; and no professional body to set and uphold standards.
The people doing this work, our membership companies’ Responsible AI leads, as well as existing AI assurance firms, auditors, evaluators are largely piecing it together themselves. techUK's April 2025 paper titled Mapping the Responsible AI Profession: Current Practice and Future Pathways, set out in detail the three critical gaps undermining RAI practitioners today: unclear role definitions, absent career pathways, and no standardised skills or training frameworks.
This is not a new concern for techUK. Our Ethics in Action: From White Paper to Workplace paper was an early attempt to bridge the gap between government's ethical principles for AI and the practical reality of how industry implements them, mapping how assurance mechanisms correspond to each of the five government-backed ethical principles and what that looks like in practice. That work, alongside our involvement in the launch of DSIT's Portfolio of AI Assurance Techniques with CDEI, reflects the depth of techUK's engagement with this agenda over several years. The consortium is not a starting point for industry, it is the much-needed next chapter.
This matters because demand is real and growing. Organisations in safety-critical, highly regulated sectors; defence, financial services, health and social care, justice, education, are increasingly asking for independent verification that their AI systems can be trusted. techUK's sector-specific AI Assurance Webinar Series explored exactly this challenge across each of these domains, and the consistent message was clear: appetite for assurance exists, but the profession to deliver it credibly does not yet. That work continues — techUK is currently working on our next paper and will be hosting a half-day conference on AI Assurance in Critical National Infrastructure, examining how assurance must evolve to meet the specific demands of sectors in the Cyber Resilience Bill like data centres, telecoms, energy, water and transport where the stakes could not be higher.
Investors are requiring assurance evidence as part of due diligence. Insurers are factoring assurance practices into coverage decisions, a dynamic techUK explored in depth in our September 2025 piece on AI insurance and a deep dive webinar. Procurement teams are beginning to treat AI governance as a contractual obligation, a theme techUK has examined closely given that most organisations don't build AI, they buy it, and that makes procurement one of the most consequential control points in responsible AI adoption.
techUK's role in the consortium reflects the breadth of that challenge. BCS leads on professionalisation bringing its experience and certification expertise.. NPL and AISI anchor the innovation and measurement work mentioned in The Trusted Third-Party Roadmap with the AI Centre for Measurement. And techUK, through the Industry Advisory Group, will connect the ecosystem: the companiesbuilding assurance tools andthe buyers deploying AI at scale. Our December 2025 report on sector-specific AI assurance applications, titled A Maturing AI Assurance Ecosystem: Sector Specific Applications, demonstrated the range and depth of implementation insight that industry brings to this work, insight that must be embedded across all workstreams of the roadmap, not just a single stream.
The UK has a real opportunity here. Relative to the size of our economy, our AI assurance market already outpaces the US, Germany and France. We have world-class professional services expertise, strong regulatory institutions, and a government commitment (reflected in the roadmap) to get this right.
techUK has been part of building that foundation, and we are committed to ensuring the consortium delivers on its promise.
The building blocks are in place. The partnerships are formed. Now comes the work.
Sue Daley OBE
Director, Technology and Innovation
Sue Daley OBE
Director, Technology and Innovation
Sue leads techUK's Technology and Innovation work. This includes work programmes on AI, Cloud, Data, Quantum, Semiconductors, Digital ID and Digital ethics as well as emerging and transformative technologies and innovation policy. In 2025, Sue was honoured with an Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to the Technology Industry in the New Year Honours List. She has also been recognised as one of the most influential people in UK tech by Computer Weekly's UKtech50 Longlist and was inducted into the Computer Weekly Most Influential Women in UK Tech Hall of Fame.
A key influencer in driving forward the tech agenda in the UK, in December 2025 Sue was appointed to the UK Government’s Women in Tech Taskforce by the Technology Secretary of State. She also sits on the UK Government’s Smart Data Council, Satellite Applications Catapult Advisory Group, Bank of England’s AI Consortium and BSI’s Digital Strategic Advisory Group. Previously, Sue was a member of the Independent Future of Compute Review and co-chaired the National Data Strategy Forum. As well as being recognised in the UK's Big Data 100 and the Global Top 100 Data Visionaries in 2020, Sue has been shortlisted for the Milton Keynes Women Leaders Awards and has been a judge for the Loebner Prize in AI, the UK Tech 50 and annual UK Cloud Awards. She is a regular industry speaker on issues including AI ethics, data protection and cyber security.
Prior to joining techUK in January 2015, Sue was responsible for Symantec's Government Relations in the UK and Ireland. Before that, Sue was senior policy advisor at the Confederation of British Industry (CBI). Sue has an BA degree on History and American Studies from Leeds University and a Master’s Degree in International Relations and Diplomacy from the University of Birmingham. Sue is a keen sportswoman and in 2016 achieved a lifelong ambition to swim the English Channel.
Senior Programme Manager in Digital Ethics and AI Safety, techUK
Tess Buckley
Senior Programme Manager in Digital Ethics and AI Safety, techUK
Tess is a digital ethicist and musician. After completing a MA in AI and Philosophy, with a focus on ableism in biotechnologies, she worked as an AI Ethics Analyst with a dataset on corporate digital responsibility (paid for by investors that wanted to understand their portfolio risks). Tess then supported the development of a specialised model for sustainability disclosure requests. Currently, at techUK, her north star as programme manager in digital ethics and AI safety is demystifying, and operationalising ethics through assurance mechanisms and standards. Outside of Tess's work, her primary research interests are in AI music systems, AI fluency and tech by/for differently abled folks.
Call for contributions: techUK's 2026 Tech & Innovation focus week
techUK's Technology & Innovation programme is excited to announce that we are now seeking contributions for our annual focus week, which is taking place from 15-19 June. During this week, we will explore the emerging and transformative technologies at the heart of UK innovation and showcase how techUK members and stakeholders are leading on their development, application and commercialisation.
The UK is a global leader in AI innovation, development and adoption.
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Get involved: techUK runs a busy calendar of activities including events, reports, and insights to demonstrate some of the most significant AI opportunities for the UK. Our AI Hub is where you will find details of all upcoming activity. We also send a monthly AI newsletter which you can subscribe to here.
The launch of the AI Assurance Consortium, chaired by BCS and supported by DSIT, marks a significant step forward in professionalising AI assurance at scale. techUK is proud to be part of the Consortium and wider roadmap as a delivery partner, leading the Industry Advisory Group and ensuring that the voice of industry, the companies building, buying and deploying AI is embedded throughout the process.
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Kir Nuthi
Head of AI and Data, techUK
Kir Nuthi
Head of AI and Data, techUK
Kir Nuthi is the Head of AI and Data at techUK.
She holds over seven years of Government Affairs and Tech Policy experience in the US and UK. Kir previously headed up the regulatory portfolio at a UK advocacy group for tech startups and held various public affairs in US tech policy. All involved policy research and campaigns on competition, artificial intelligence, access to data, and pro-innovation regulation.
Kir has an MSc in International Public Policy from University College London and a BA in both Political Science (International Relations) and Economics from the University of California San Diego.
Outside of techUK, you are likely to find her attempting studies at art galleries, attempting an elusive headstand at yoga, mending and binding books, or chasing her dog Maya around South London's many parks.
Usman joined techUK in January 2024 as Programme Manager for Artificial Intelligence.
He leads techUK’s AI Adoption programme, supporting members of all sizes and sectors in adopting AI at scale. His work involves identifying barriers to adoption, exploring solutions, and helping to unlock AI’s transformative potential, particularly its benefits for people, the economy, society, and the planet. He is also committed to advancing the UK’s AI sector and ensuring the UK remains a global leader in AI by working closely with techUK members, the UK Government, regulators, and devolved and local authorities.
Since joining techUK, Usman has delivered a regular drumbeat of activity to engage members and advance techUK's AI programme. This has included two campaign weeks, the creation of the AI Adoption Hub (now the AI Hub), the AI Leader's Event Series, the Putting AI into Action webinar series and the Industrial AI sprint campaign.
Before joining techUK, Usman worked as a policy, regulatory and government/public affairs professional in the advertising sector. He has also worked in sales, marketing, and FinTech.
Usman holds an MSc from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), a GDL and LLB from BPP Law School, and a BA from Queen Mary University of London.
When he isn’t working, Usman enjoys spending time with his family and friends. He also has a keen interest in running, reading and travelling.
Sue leads techUK's Technology and Innovation work. This includes work programmes on AI, Cloud, Data, Quantum, Semiconductors, Digital ID and Digital ethics as well as emerging and transformative technologies and innovation policy. In 2025, Sue was honoured with an Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to the Technology Industry in the New Year Honours List. She has also been recognised as one of the most influential people in UK tech by Computer Weekly's UKtech50 Longlist and was inducted into the Computer Weekly Most Influential Women in UK Tech Hall of Fame.
A key influencer in driving forward the tech agenda in the UK, in December 2025 Sue was appointed to the UK Government’s Women in Tech Taskforce by the Technology Secretary of State. She also sits on the UK Government’s Smart Data Council, Satellite Applications Catapult Advisory Group, Bank of England’s AI Consortium and BSI’s Digital Strategic Advisory Group. Previously, Sue was a member of the Independent Future of Compute Review and co-chaired the National Data Strategy Forum. As well as being recognised in the UK's Big Data 100 and the Global Top 100 Data Visionaries in 2020, Sue has been shortlisted for the Milton Keynes Women Leaders Awards and has been a judge for the Loebner Prize in AI, the UK Tech 50 and annual UK Cloud Awards. She is a regular industry speaker on issues including AI ethics, data protection and cyber security.
Prior to joining techUK in January 2015, Sue was responsible for Symantec's Government Relations in the UK and Ireland. Before that, Sue was senior policy advisor at the Confederation of British Industry (CBI). Sue has an BA degree on History and American Studies from Leeds University and a Master’s Degree in International Relations and Diplomacy from the University of Birmingham. Sue is a keen sportswoman and in 2016 achieved a lifelong ambition to swim the English Channel.
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