Portugal now has a national plan for artificial intelligence — and 25 million for the state
The government approved its National AI Agenda for 2026-2030, with investment in public administration and a centre of excellence.
Everyone talks about artificial intelligence, but what’s been missing is what the country actually intends to do with it. Now there’s a document that tries to answer: the National Artificial Intelligence Agenda, approved for the 2026-2030 period.
The premise is honest and a touch harsh: Portuguese productivity sits at around 75% of the European average, and the government sees AI as a rare chance to close part of that gap — accelerating growth, modernising the state, and freeing workers from repetitive tasks.
Where the money goes
The first concrete bet is in-house: 25 million euros are earmarked for public administration to adopt AI solutions, starting in the first half of the year. Alongside it, a Centre of Excellence for AI in Public Administration is being created, tasked with developing, testing and scaling tools applied to public services — the kind that, at best, make a trip to the tax office or the health centre hurt a little less.
There’s also a National AI Week planned for the second half of the year, with demos and events open to anyone curious about the technology without being an engineer.
Is the enthusiasm warranted?
This country never lacks plans; what usually lacks is execution. The difference will be measured not on paper, but in public services that work better and companies that actually adopt these tools. For now, the signal is right: Portugal has decided to treat AI as a state priority, not a passing fad.
What remains is the hard part — moving from the PowerPoint to the ground.
Illustrative · Photo: Alex Knight / Pexels