A Coruña, May 5 (EFE).- The Minister of Foreign Affairs, José Manuel Albares, has identified this Friday training in digital skills as “the great challenge” for the immediate future.
The Palace of Congresses and Exhibitions of A Coruña has hosted yesterday and today Ecosystems2030, the summit on technology and innovation that celebrates its third edition, the second in a row in A Coruña.
In closing, Albares assured that “A Coruña is positioning itself as a first-rate center for Artificial Intelligence”, a key issue for many sectors such as “industry, health, transport, logistics or financial services”.
Another pillar must be, according to him, the “common language”, in reference to Spanish, for which he hopes “that this Artificial Intelligence will also develop in our language”.
These two issues must “help build a resilient Europe” that must “re-industrialise” in the “digital age, with the benefits of technology”.
For this reason, he has assured that for governments, at present, “training in digital skills” is “the great challenge” and will be one of the issues that Spain addresses in its next presidency of the Council of the European Union.
The president of Ecosystems, Omar Hatamleh, explained that during the two days they have talked about “artificial intelligence, robotics, quantum physics and the impact of longevity on society”, among other topics.
Now the objective is “to take this towards something that has an impact at the international level” for which he has demanded that everyone be “proactive”.
The councilor of Facenda de la Xunta, Miguel Corgos, has highlighted “the talent and the enterprise” as two of the characteristics “typical of the people of Galicia”.
The Councilor for Tourism of A Coruña, Ignacio Borrego, has opined that the city has become these days “the world capital of technological progress and the epicenter of the future”.