APRA calls for a step-change in AI-related risk management and governance | APRA

https://www.apra.gov.au/news-and-publications/apra-calls-for-a-step-change-ai-related-risk-management-and-governance
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2026-04-30 13:45:33 · kgurnani@vixio.com
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APRA has called for a step-change in how banks, insurers and superannuation trustees manage AI-related risks as the technology continues to rapidly evolve.

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TITLE: Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority Calls for Enhanced Artificial Intelligence Risk Management and Governance BODY: On 30 April 2026, the Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority (APRA) published a letter to industry calling for a significant step-change in how banks, insurers and superannuation trustees manage artificial intelligence (AI)-related risks. The letter follows a targeted supervisory review APRA conducted across all its regulated industries in late 2025 to examine how AI was being deployed and governed. APRA identified that governance, risk management, assurance and operational resilience practices are not keeping pace with the scale, speed and complexity of AI adoption. Key findings include: AI use is accelerating across all APRA-regulated industries, with entities moving from experimentation to operationally embedded and customer-facing applications; however, boards often lack the technical literacy required to provide effective oversight of AI-related risks. APRA also noted heightened concentration risk, with some entities heavily dependent on single AI providers for multiple use cases and gaps in contingency planning. The review found that AI functionality embedded within broader software platforms reduces transparency over model training, updates and constraints, limiting entities' ability to assess and manage risks. Additionally, existing change and assurance management approaches are often fragmented and may not provide sufficient assurance for AI systems. APRA warned that frontier AI models could enhance vulnerability discovery by malicious actors, further increasing the probability, speed and scale of cyber attacks. APRA Member Therese McCarthy Hockey emphasised that while AI presents opportunities for improved efficiency and customer services, entities must significantly improve how they close gaps between the power of the technology they use and their ability to monitor and control it. While APRA is not proposing additional requirements at this stage, it expects entities to demonstrate substantial improvement in alignment with existing prudential standards covering information security, operational risk management, governance and data risk.
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