The European Commission’s Guidelines on the Scope of the Obligations for General-Purpose AI Models (‘Guidelines’) were published on 18 July 2025, ahead of today’s entry into application of Chapter V of the AI Act (Regulation 2024/1689). The Guidelines, now approved, aim to clarify how the Commission interprets and will enforce the AI Act’s provisions on general-purpose AI (GPAI) models—including those with systemic risk. They lay out compliance expectations for AI developers and deployers, especially those handling high-impact, multi-purpose models.
The Guidelines cover four main areas:
- definitions and classification of GPAI models;
- obligations for providers;
- exemptions for open-source models; and
- enforcement by the AI Office.
The general context of the Guidelines aligns with Digital for Planet’s (D4P) mission: promoting sustainable, inclusive, zero‑pollution digital space in Europe, including, among others, efficient and ethical AI. We have unpacked the Guidelines and focused on three points that are the most prominent for D4P mission:
- the use of generative AI in research (including for writing proposals under Horizon Europe and other European R&I funding schemes);
- open-source model governance;
- energy efficiency.
Key elements
Shared vision
The Guidelines are of critical relevance for actors seeking Horizon Europe Pillar II funding, as they intersect with regulatory, research, and ethical innovation priorities. Hence, also for D4P, our partners, our clients, and our supporters.
D4P works on several Horizon Europe projects and proposals on efficient and ethical AI (see, e.g., CERTAIN, COP-PILOT, etc.). Therefore, we could not miss these Guidelines and AI Act Chater V application. D4P’s work across climate-neutral, inclusive, and responsible AI hinges on efficient, harmonised rules for AI, including GPAI. Connected to this, the new Guidelines’ regulatory foresights that we support, include, for example:
- Streamlined obligations — because it will leverage the capacity in European research, including to address transparency, responsibility, and energy efficiency of AI, and broader inclusivity, protection of privacy and fundamental rights, and conservation of nature, climate, and biodiversity;
- Enforcement — because it will likely further nurture innovation in sustainable AI-driven and co-created tools, and further digital tools and services.
D4P invites stakeholders to join the conversation—visit our #DecodeGreen portal and subscribe to our newsletter for updates.