TED Talks Daily - Inside Dubai's mission to build the city of the future | His Excellency Khalfan Belhoul, Whitney Pennington Rodgers
Episode Date: June 6, 2026What does it look like when a city becomes a laboratory for innovation? His Excellency Khalfan Belhoul, CEO of the Dubai Future Foundation, explains why Dubai is cutting the bureaucratic red tape to e...xperiment with big ideas in everything from AI and emerging tech to finance and climate solutions. The future, he says, depends on those willing to test it. (This conversation is hosted by TED's Whitney Pennington Rodgers.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I'm your host, Elise Hu.
What does it look like when a government becomes a laboratory for the future?
So you get the entrepreneurs, you get the investors, and you back it up by also investing as government,
and create an environment, which is what we call the sandbox environment, which is really
testing those ideas in a safe matter.
That's His Excellency, Calphan Belhul.
He's the CEO of the Dubai Future Fund.
Foundation. He sat down with TED curator Whitney Pennington Rogers for a conversation about
the ways Dubai is supporting bold experimentation in everything from AI and emerging tech to innovative
finance solutions and climate change. They discuss why governments and organizations must embrace
failure as an integral part of progress and why global collaboration is the only path forward
in this age of AI, climate risk, and geopolitical tension. The world has recently been giving us so many
signs, so many signs that there's no other way forward than us to all get together.
That's coming up after a quick break. And now our conversation of the day. Thank you for being
here, Your Excellency. You run the Dubai Future Foundation. For those of us who are not initiated,
what is a future foundation? So imagine you run a lab and the owner of the lab comes to you and says,
You can do whatever you want, and you have my full backing,
and you have solid amount of financial resources.
If rules are an issue, we can change them for you.
We can connect you with any relevant decision maker to break those rules.
We will not be upset if you make mistakes,
and we will support you on every winning bet you make.
And in summary, will you take that?
I would take that deal, yeah.
Okay, so the owner of the lab is Sheikh Mohammed Varashid.
The lab is Dubai Future Foundation.
So that's how it is.
We are entitled and empowered to explore new ideas, to see where the future is heading.
We've been supported and backed by a top board of trustees.
I mean, our chairman is the Crown Prince.
The board members are ministers and director generals.
across all sectors,
which means if we want to disrupt mobility, we can,
if we want to talk health tech, we can,
if we want to explore fintech, we can.
We have the muscle behind us,
and we have the support in case we fail.
The unique thing is this makes us,
which is usually, and I'm sure you're aware from,
I mean, the global landscape,
that usually governments are hurdle
or they take time or they're bureaucratic.
We are hearing from our leaders
that we can actually do this.
This is music to our reasons.
So this pushes us, this makes us comfortable in actually pivoting.
And if we have any venture captives out here, you would understand this more than anyone.
They don't talk about 80% of their portfolio that goes bust, but they really back the winning bets.
But they've all made those mistakes, but they don't look at them as mistakes.
They look at them as learning points.
And I think this mindset that's been given to us from leaders to really explore and test and double down on winning bets is what made a Dubai FutureFeture.
foundation of success. I think a lot of nations and a lot of cities talk about this idea of progress
and being futurist, but it's hard to sustain, sustain that. And so what are some of the ways
that you're able to get buy-in and to be able to embed in both government and culture
futurist thinking? What we do is we start, first of all, by ensuring that our internal
team, are experts in understanding where the future is heading. So we invite. We invest. We,
invest a lot in people that have this as their subject matter expertise when it comes to future foresight.
So we invest a lot on internal talent.
So we have a foresight team that does horizon scanning on a constant basis.
And this becomes our engine.
But we don't stop there because this is not only confined to us as Dubai Future Foundation.
We also connect with like-minded networks from all over the world that also feed us more information.
and then this gives us a view of where the future is heading
and the further you go the greater it becomes
we can maybe have a better prediction of what's happening in 2026
the more you go the more challenging the guests would be right
but the more conversations you have the more inclusion there is in the conversation
the better visibility you have and then it's all about being agile and flexible
and getting everyone involved and having the guts to really test
test but at the same time
create a safe environment in testing
so you get the entrepreneurs
you get the investors and you back it up
by also investing as government
and create an environment which is what we
call the sandbox environment which is really
testing those ideas
in a safe matter for example if you're looking
at last mile drone deliveries
you're not going to deploy that before you actually
make sure it's safe for people
so you need that physical space for that
on the less physical and less tangible
kind of projects you look at
the crypto world and the digital assets.
You don't see them in front of you, but the value of them is immense.
But can we actually open them up to the market
before we create a virtual safe environment,
including all the relevant parties to have a proper conversation
on a deployment basis?
I mean, we can do as much of that as we want.
But if there wasn't a mechanism of ensuring this,
this can be deployed safely and in a unified way,
then we'll just be talking about.
to ourselves. Well, and I think
Dubai represents such a compelling
example of economic
transformation, shifting away from
oil revenue to other spaces like tourism.
Can you talk about
the current economic
state of Dubai and sort of how
you think that will influence where
the city is headed? We are
living in a very turbulent
environment. The Middle
East is a very tough neighborhood.
Our country is not so big
from a size,
but the ambitions are bigger than anyone.
We have tensions around the world,
whether it's big nations conflicting on economical issues,
geopolitical issues,
and the country has pushed itself to be a bridge of peace
when it comes to business, when it comes to geopolitics.
And I think this is what really attracted people
to really come to Dubai.
We as maybe locals tend to underestimate
the safety factor and the prosperity factor.
We just got too comfortable and got too used to it,
but when we have conversations with our fellow expats
that come in and choose Dubai or the Uyas home,
we listen to them, and this gives me goosebumps
on how those small details of safety and prosperity
for them and their families means so much
that makes us really appreciate the structure here.
But again, I say we're not perfect.
We've done our fair share of mistakes,
but we double down on what we do right.
We seem to be in a very transformative moment as a world.
And what role do you think when you think about things like,
beyond even just geopolitical tensions, as you mentioned,
and economic issues, when you think about existential threats,
for instance, like climate change or the rise of artificial intelligence,
what role do you see futurist thinking playing in global progress?
So I'll tell you my humble advice.
The world has recently been giving us so many signs,
so many signs that there's no other way forward
than us to all get together.
You mentioned them.
Geopolitical issues, they're not going to work.
We need to work together for peace.
Digital economy, which is in trillions of dollars
when we talk about the value of AI,
we're talking economy-wise, we talk about trillion.
So that's another sign.
Climate change.
How can we resolve for that?
There needs to be, we've seen it in COP announcements and beyond,
there needs to be unity.
AI.
I mean, if I start to talk about it, I won't stop.
I mean, how many of us, let me maybe start with you.
How much do you use chat, GB, GROC, or you name it,
like those LLMs, do you use it?
Regularly, yeah.
Do you use it daily?
Probably, yeah.
I use it daily.
Raise of hands, do you use it daily?
Okay.
Do you use it to the extent that you actually feel there's a person sitting on the other side talking to you?
Not yet, but I know many who do.
I'm close to that.
I'm telling you from the fact that we interact and the emotional angle sometimes you get and the responses,
and we haven't even scratched the surface on how we will deal with that.
And you feel so comfortable talking to chat GBT on many of those LLM.
So imagine, imagine you actually, this gets, and I've said this,
maybe it might sound like a broken racket to my colleagues,
but imagine having this conversation with a robot that looks like a human,
which we are not far from seeing.
And I promise you that this is going to come very soon
with the same intellect of the chat GPD and even a thousand times much more than that.
What happens to humanity and how do we really interact even from an emotional standpoint?
We have some weak and vulnerable individuals around the world
that can feel more comfortable with robots than humans.
So what would this mean to us as humanity?
Are we going to get attached to robots?
How are we going to regulate that?
How are we going to really extract value of artificial intelligence?
That's why I'm saying what we see with CHATGPT now
is the first second of the first minute,
of the first hour, of the first day, of the first year,
of this beast that has so much value,
but that we really need to embrace and we need to embrace jointly.
And there's no chance that Dubai or the UAE or the Middle East can do it alone,
nor does the US, nor does China.
It's a collaborative effort.
And even look at our kids now,
their attachment to technology, what is the right balance?
They're so smart in front of screens.
But if you ask them to come on stage and have a conversation,
they might not be as comfortable
because they're just so involved into technologies
and they do things that I'll probably never think of doing
because they're so into it and they're doing such an amazing job.
But life is not only about that.
It's how you strike the balance
and how do we really huddle up together as humanity
because technology is super valuable,
but humans are more important.
Well, Your Excellency, I cannot let you go
without asking you this last question.
You spend so much time thinking about the future.
What do you think is the big thing
that many of us are missing when we think about what's ahead.
There's one that sticks out to me.
So I'll mention a few and then I'll tell you which one I think is the...
So, I mean, longevity and living to...
Especially with the neuroscience and the advancement of neuroscience at the moment,
we can see people living until 150 years.
And this is not far from now.
So this is, I think, a statement that I know is exciting and exciting to many.
I'm not sure if you guys are excited about it.
But many people, if you're in good health,
you would want to live 250,
but I think this is not far off,
given the advancement as well
of genetics and DNA sampling
and like I said, neuroscience.
I think humans being a multi-planetary species,
we're not far from that as well.
The access to different planets
has become easier and easier and cost-effective.
So this is also a bold kind of thought
that's probably exciting scientists
to actually
I'm not sure if we
I think we have enough on Earth
I don't know if we want to be there
but of course
having that is something that
everyone is excited about
it's a bold statement but achievable
but the one that really
really really I mean makes me think
a lot is slightly relevant to the comment
that I mentioned is
once you
really infuse
human intelligence
with artificial intelligence
into one neural
network. And when this happens, I think this is when you're really, things are going to be
really exciting. Because we're talking about AI being super smart, AI being almost human-like,
and this is, to the previous point, this is happening and happening very soon. Look at how we're
dealing with chat GPT. But then what if AI was infused in a human? And having a single kind of
network that connects human intelligence with artificial intelligence.
I think with neuroscience, this is not very far.
And this is something that really requires, again, collaboration, understanding, and unity
because this is a whole new world.
Well, Your Excellency, this has been insightful and exciting.
I'm sure I speak for everyone here.
So thank you so much for taking the time to be with us today.
Your Excellency, Calphan Bahru.
That was His Excellency, Calphan Belho.
in conversation with Whitney Pennington Rogers at TED at BCG in Dubai in 2025.
If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team and produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonicaa Sung Marnivong.
This episode was mixed by Lucy Little.
Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Ballerazo.
I'm Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feet.
Thanks for listening.
