- The General Command of Dubai Civil Defense and Dubai AI Campus have launched the Civil Defense AI Lab at the DIFC Innovation Hub to accelerate the use of artificial intelligence in fire safety and emergency response.
- Dubai AI Campus frames the lab as part of a wider effort to convert research and pilot projects into operational systems that serve residents and businesses.
- As part of the partnership, Dubai AI Campus will organise an official visit for a Civil Defense delegation to Silicon Valley to study the latest global capabilities in robotics, drones, and AI-based command platforms.
The General Command of Dubai Civil Defense and Dubai AI Campus have launched the Civil Defense AI Lab at the DIFC Innovation Hub to accelerate the use of artificial intelligence in fire safety and emergency response. The announcement aligns with the Dubai Universal Blueprint for Artificial Intelligence, which seeks faster adoption of AI and a stronger global position for Dubai in future technologies. Dubai AI Campus operates as the region’s largest dedicated cluster of AI companies within DIFC and now extends that ecosystem into public safety. Senior attendees at the launch included Major General Jamal bin Adhed Al Muhairi, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of Civil Defense, Arif Amiri, CEO of DIFC Authority, Lieutenant Colonel Dr Essa Al Mutawa, and Mohammad Alblooshi, CEO of DIFC Innovation Hub. Officials described the new lab as a specialised platform that accelerates development and deployment cycles for life-saving AI applications in the emirate.
Civil Defense leaders said the lab will support an integrated smart system that raises readiness levels for firefighting teams and embeds AI tools in rescue and public-safety operations. The roadmap includes smart firefighting technologies, joint development programmes, and deeper collaboration between public bodies and private AI firms. Authorities also place strong emphasis on building national expertise and forming global alliances that bring advanced practices into Dubai’s safety infrastructure. Dubai AI Campus frames the lab as part of a wider effort to convert research and pilot projects into operational systems that serve residents and businesses. Together, the partners expect the lab to serve as a bridge between early-stage AI concepts and field-ready solutions across the emergency-response chain.
As part of the partnership, Dubai AI Campus will organise an official visit for a Civil Defense delegation to Silicon Valley to study the latest global capabilities in robotics, drones, and AI-based command platforms. Delegates plan to meet start-ups and global corporations to explore tools that enhance situational awareness, dispatch, and incident management. The visit aims to identify technologies that can raise the accuracy and speed of Dubai’s emergency-response system. Dubai AI Campus already hosts international AI firms at DIFC and now connects that network more directly with operational agencies. This outward and inward link positions the lab as both a local testbed and a channel for importing proven systems from leading tech markets.
DIFC’s leadership views the Civil Defense AI Lab as part of a broader push to embed AI in critical sectors across Dubai’s economy. The centre already hosts more than 1,500 innovation and tech firms and uses Dubai AI Campus as a focal point for AI-focused clusters. By adding public safety to that cluster, DIFC extends AI usage beyond finance and enterprise into city resilience and risk management. For Civil Defense, the lab creates a formal structure for pilots, training, and partnerships that respond to the growing complexity of urban environments. The collaboration signals that AI in Dubai now targets measurable impact on lives, infrastructure, and economic continuity rather than remaining confined to conceptual projects.