In a sign of the growing geopolitical influence of artificial intelligence as it rises to the top of the global agenda, the heads of the world’s largest AI companies will attend the G7 meeting in France on Wednesday.
The CEOs, including OpenAI’s Sam Altman, Anthropic’s Dario Amodei and Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, will join about a dozen other technology leaders for a lunch meeting at the summit in Evian on Wednesday.
Frontier AI risks, infrastructure, and sovereignty will all be discussed at the conference. The Elysée Palace, the French presidential palace in Paris, said at a press conference on Thursday that the protection of children online will also be an important part of the discussion.
Other technology leaders will also attend the luncheon, including Arthur Mensch of France-based Mistral, Aidan Gomez, CEO of Canada’s Kohia, Urjan Charka of Italian company Domin, Victor Riparbelli of UK-based AI scaleup Synthesia, and Robin Rombach of Germany-based Black Forest Labs. sales forceMarc Benioff, metaIn addition to Alex Wang, the founders of Indian AI company Sarvam and Japan’s Sakana are also scheduled to attend.
Jessica Brandt, senior fellow for technology and national security at the Council on Foreign Relations, told CNBC: “This shows that making credible commitments on AI will require leaders to work with, if not approve, the small number of private sector executives who are currently building the technology.”
“We’re seeing a shift in who’s at the table and a signal of where the seats of power are.”
“Inflection point”
The G7 summit, which includes the US, UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the EU, comes as Anthropic continues to negotiate with the US government after the US government imposed export controls on the AI Institute’s Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models amid national security concerns.
Recent announcements of powerful AI models with advanced cyber capabilities, such as Anthropic’s Mythos and OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 Cyber, have led to a wave of concerns from businesses and governments over weaknesses in digital security.
Cameron Kelly, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution, told CNBC that the release of Mythos marked a “tipping point” in AI development, adding that it prompted the Trump administration to consider regulating the technology.

U.S. export controls on Anthropic models “changed everything,” said Emerson Brooking, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council.
“Several G7 countries have hinted at the need for sovereign AI investment in the past, but the assumption was always that this would happen in parallel with access to the U.S. technology stack,” he told CNBC. “Now, the United States has signaled its intention to cut off the G7, and even treaty allies, from certain AI capabilities.”
For technology company leaders, having a seat at the table during the G7 is an important opportunity to influence policy discussions at the highest levels.
“Companies appear to be looking to package voluntary commitments, such as youth safety and frontier risks in cyber and bio, and these pledges are likely to become de facto global standards,” Brandt said.
Earlier this month, OpenAI told CNBC it expected technology companies to reach a series of “voluntary commitments” during the summit.
“Frontier Institute wants to shape this discussion before there are binding rules,” Brookings told CNBC.
