26/05/2026
🚀 How can policymakers stay ahead of massive technological disruption? A new OECD working paper confirms what we at 4CF have championed for years: systematic horizon scanning is essential for future-proofing policy and maintaining strategic autonomy.
At 4CF The Futures Literacy Company, we’ve been putting this into practice for nearly two decades. Building on our extensive timeline of foresight projects—such as our recent work with the European Commission on the prospects of AI adoption in EU industry, and mapping future scenarios for the transition to post-quantum cryptography for the European Cybersecurity Competence Centre (ECCC)—we know firsthand the value of detecting weak signals early.
The latest OECD report, "Building Capacity in Technology Horizon Scanning: A Guide for Policymakers," analyzes 129 international exercises and highlights the most significant technological disruptions shaping the policy landscape:
🧠 1. Artificial Intelligence (The Cross-Cutting Disruptor): AI is a primary engine for economic growth and technology sovereignty. While it can optimize energy grids and accelerate drug discovery, policymakers face a profound "dual-use" dilemma. You must balance the benefits against severe risks like algorithmic bias, critical infrastructure vulnerabilities, and the massive water and energy consumption of AI data centers.
💻 2. Quantum Technologies (The Security Frontier): Ranked as a top priority for strategic autonomy, quantum computing is an impending existential threat to current cryptographic systems. The global race is already on to implement Quantum Key Distribution and post-quantum cryptography to secure digital infrastructures, while simultaneously accelerating R&D capabilities.
🔋 3. Advanced Batteries & Energy Storage (The Sovereignty Challenge): Transitioning to renewable energy and electrifying defense sectors rely entirely on next-generation battery chemistries. However, heavy reliance on critical raw materials (like lithium and cobalt) concentrated in just a few countries creates severe supply chain vulnerabilities and geopolitical dependencies.
🧬 4. Biotechnology & Gene Editing (The Health & Ethics Balancing Act): CRISPR and RNA therapies are revolutionizing chronic disease treatment and climate-resilient agriculture. Despite the upside, these technologies demand strict governance to manage dual-use biosecurity threats and ensure expensive therapies do not widen the gap in healthcare accessibility.
To ensure national policies remain competitive and resilient, governments must adopt structured processes to gather intelligence and embrace international collaboration.
👇 Read the full OECD working paper in the comments below! What technology do you think will be the hardest to govern in the next decade?