Helia Samani
Program Associate, Global Biological Policy and Programs
The stakes for U.S. biotechnology could not be higher. Synthetic biology, AI-driven design, and other frontier technologies hold extraordinary promise for advances in medicine, agriculture, clean energy, and manufacturing. At the same time, these tools introduce vulnerabilities that—if misused, whether accidentally or deliberately—could threaten public safety, economic stability, and national security.
Innovation requires security, and security requires innovation. Congress needs to act decisively to ensure U.S. leadership in biotechnology is paired with governance that keeps its development secure.
The United States has the talent, infrastructure, and resources to lead responsibly. However, oversight remains fragmented and reactive, leaving gaps that adversaries could exploit and innovators find burdensome. Without modernized governance, the world remains vulnerable to catastrophic biological events that could cause mass casualties, inflict trillions in economic losses, and destabilize governments.
At a September 10th Capitol Hill discussion on Biosecurity and Innovation in the Age of AI, Senator Todd Young (R-Ind.), Dr. Sam Weiss Evans (National Security Commission on Emerging Biotechnology, NSCEB), Dr. James Diggans (Twist Bioscience), Dr. Sarah R. Carter (Science Policy Consulting), and moderator Dr. Jaime Yassif (NTI | bio) highlighted several vulnerabilities in U.S. biotechnology oversight:
To address these gaps, NTI | bio recommends four practical steps to embed strong biotechnology governance and biosecurity into the U.S. bioeconomy.
Congress has already acted on more than half of the NSCEB’s 49 recommendations, signaling strong bipartisan support for safeguarding U.S. biotechnology innovation. Industry leaders have likewise expressed readiness to partner with policymakers to implement these practices.
The policy next steps are clear: require DNA synthesis screening, invest in safeguards at the nexus of AI and the life sciences, and establish a dedicated authority for biotechnology oversight. These are practical measures Congress can address now. While voluntary measures and executive actions have moved the conversation forward, only legislation can provide the comprehensive, enforceable framework needed to secure biotechnology.
As Senator Young concluded, “Congress owes it to our constituents to do this once and do it right. Biosecurity can accelerate the next century of American innovation. Our national security depends on it.”
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As the capabilities of biological AI tools continue to advance at an accelerating pace, it is vital that DNA synthesis providers and others in the biosecurity space embrace new guardrails to prevent their misuse.
Some of the world’s largest AI companies—Google DeepMind, OpenAI, and Anthropic—have warned that their models could be misused to cause harm with biology. The India AI Impact Summit is a critical moment for policymakers, scientists, developers, and biosecurity experts to work together on responsible governance that reduces AIxBio risks.
Over the past decade, governments, private industry, and academic institutions have increased their investments in bioscience research and development, yielding global benefits. However, these advancements have also increased the risk of deliberate misuse of biology to cause harm.
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