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Thursday, October 16, 2025

Latin America Rising > Chile, Brazil, and Uruguay lead AI development in Latin America; Marduro moves embassies from Norway and Australia to Africa

 

Chile, Brazil lead AI development in Latin America, report says

Chile topped the Latin American Artificial Intelligence Index 2025 for the second consecutive year with 70.5 points, followed by Brazil with 67.3 and Uruguay with 62.3 Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko/Pexels
Chile topped the Latin American Artificial Intelligence Index 2025 for the second consecutive year with 70.5 points, followed by Brazil with 67.3 and Uruguay with 62.3 Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko/Pexels

Oct. 14 (UPI) -- Chile topped the Latin American Artificial Intelligence Index 2025 for the second consecutive year with 70.5 points, followed by Brazil with 67.3 and Uruguay with 62.3 in a ranking that evaluates AI development in 19 countries across Latin America and the Caribbean.

One of the major findings was the progress of countries such as Costa Rica, Ecuador, the Dominican Republic and Guatemala, which made significant gains in connectivity, training and national AI strategies.

The report says this trend shows that education reforms and institutional openness can accelerate technological maturity even in mid-sized economies.

However, it also warns that the region continues to face major gaps in infrastructure, governance and specialized talent, which could widen the digital divide in the coming years.

The study, conducted by Chile's National Center for Artificial Intelligence with support from universities, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean and the European Union, measures three main dimensions: enabling factors (infrastructure, talent and data); research, development and adoption; and governance. Each country receives a score out of maximum 100 based on its digital maturity and AI policies.

Costa Rica stands out as a regional leader in AI skills and in integrating the subject into school curricula, alongside Ecuador, the Dominican Republic and Uruguay.

In Colombia, meanwhile, self-taught learning has played a key role: the country leads digital education on platforms such as Coursera, driving technological literacy beyond traditional systems.

Despite these advances, the report warns that basic literacy still far exceeds advanced training. Thirteen of the 19 countries surveyed do not yet offer doctoral programs in AI, and the shortage of specialized talent limits developing local solutions.

The study found that Brazil accounts for more than 90% of the region's high-performance computing capacity, underscoring a strong concentration of technology.

Only Uruguay, Costa Rica and Colombia show competitive per-capita levels of graphics processing unit.

By contrast, 11 countries still score below 50 points in digital infrastructure, restricting the growth of robust AI ecosystems.

Adding to that, the report highlights a persistent data bottleneck. Although the region generates large volumes of information, only a few countries -- including Chile and Mexico -- have made progress in opening and standardizing their data.

"Without real data availability, algorithmic decisions can be biased and public policies less effective," the report said.

During presentation of the index, National Center for Artificial Intelligence manager Rodrigo Durán warned that although Latin America is making progress, the gap with the major technology powers of the Global North is widening rapidly.

About 68% of active AI researchers are based in Brazil and Mexico, while Chile and Brazil produce 90% of the region's high-impact academic publications.

The report also highlights limited public participation in using AI for citizen consultations or policy co-creation -- tools with the potential to strengthen digital democracy. Only Mexico, Colombia and Peru have made concrete progress in this area.

Despite these challenges, the report's authors argue that AI represents an unprecedented opportunity for inclusion and productivity. Unlike past industrial revolutions, its adoption does not depend on complex production structures.

The challenge, they conclude, is to align digitalization with sustainable development and regional cooperation by strengthening infrastructure, talent and governance.

"Latin America already accounts for 15% to 20% of the global market for generative AI applications but only 1% of global investment. That imbalance shows the enormous potential still to be tapped," said Álvaro Soto, director of the artificial intelligence center.

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Venezuela to close embassies in Norway, Australia

   
A handout photo made available by the Cuban Presidency shows Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro (C) delivering a speech on the day of his inauguration as president, in Caracas, Venezuela, in January. On Monday, Maduro announced Venezuela would close its embassies in Norway and Australia while opening new embassies in Burkina Faso and Zimbabwe. File Photo by Alejandro Azcuy/EPA
A handout photo made available by the Cuban Presidency shows Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro (C) delivering a speech on the day of his inauguration as president, in Caracas, Venezuela, in January. On Monday, Maduro announced Venezuela would close its embassies in Norway and Australia while opening new embassies in Burkina Faso and Zimbabwe. File Photo by Alejandro Azcuy/EPA

Oct. 13 (UPI) -- Venezuela announced Monday it will close its embassies in Norway and Australia in a "strategic re-assignment of resources" amid growing tensions with the United States and a Nobel Peace Prize for the opposition.

President Nicolas Maduro announced Venezuela would open new embassies in Burkina Faso and Zimbabwe, "two sister nations, strategic allies in the anti-colonial fight and in the resistance against hegemonic pressures," according to the Caracas government.

"The central objective of this reorganization is to optimize state resources and redefine our diplomatic presence to strengthen alliances with the Global South, promoting solidarity among peoples and cooperation in strategic areas for mutual development," Venezuela's foreign ministry wrote in the statement.

Monday's announcement that Venezuela will close its Oslo embassy comes three days after Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado won the 2025 Nobel Peace Price for her efforts to restore democracy in Venezuela and end the dictatorship of Maduro as "one of the most extraordinary examples of civilian courage in Latin America."

Machado was chosen to run against Maduro in Venezuela's 2011 and 2024 elections, but the government banned her from participating over her activism against the Maduro regime.

Maduro on Sunday responded to Machado's Nobel Prize, awarded by Norway's foreign ministry, by calling her "a demonic witch."

Growing tensions between Venezuela and the United States, which have escalated over U.S. drug strikes on vessels off the country's Caribbean coast, also played into the decision to relocate embassies to Zimbabwe and Burkina Faso, which are more aligned with Russia.

"The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela reaffirms that these actions reflect its unwavering will to defend national sovereignty and actively contribute to the construction of a new world order based on justice, solidarity and inclusion."

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