Experimental AI concludes as autonomous systems rise
Generative AI’s experimental phase is concluding, making way for truly autonomous systems in 2026 that act rather than merely summarise.
2026 will lose the focus on model parameters and be about agency, energy efficiency, and the ability to navigate complex industrial environments. The next twelve months represent a departure from chatbots toward autonomous systems executing workflows with minimal oversight; forcing organisations to rethink infrastructure, governance, and talent management.
Autonomous AI systems take the wheel
Hanen Garcia, Chief Architect for Telecommunications at Red Hat, argues that while 2025 was defined by experimentation, the coming year marks a “decisive pivot towards agentic AI, autonomous software entities capable of reasoning, planning, and executing complex workflows without constant human intervention.”
Telecoms and heavy industry are the proving grounds. Garcia points to a trajectory toward autonomous network operations (ANO), moving beyond simple automation to self-configuring and self-healing systems. The business goal is to reverse commoditisation by “prioritising intelligence over pure infrastructure” and reduce operating expenditures.
Technologically, service providers are deploying multiagent systems (MAS). Rather than relying on a single model, these allow distinct agents to collaborate on multi-step tasks, handling complex interactions autonomously. However, increased autonomy introduces new threats.
Emmet King, Founding Partner of J12 Ventures, warns that “as AI agents gain the ability to autonomously execute tasks, hidden instructions embedded in images and workflows become potential attack vectors.” Security priorities must therefore shift from endpoint protection to “governing and auditing autonomous AI actions.”
As organisations scale these autonomous AI workloads, they hit a physical wall: power.
King argues energy availability, rather than model access, will determine which startups scale. “Compute scarcity is now a function of grid capacity,” King states, suggesting energy policy will become the de facto AI policy in Europe.
KPIs must adapt. Sergio Gago, CTO at Cloudera, predicts enterprises will prioritise energy efficiency as a primary metric. “The new competitive edge won’t come from the largest models, but from the most intelligent, efficient use of resources.”
Horizontal copilots lacking domain expertise or proprietary data will fail ROI tests as buyers measure real productivity. The “clearest enterprise ROI” will emerge from manufacturing, logistics, and advanced engineering—sectors where AI integrates into high-value workflows rather than consumer-facing interfaces.
AI ends the static app in 2026
Software consumption is changing too. Chris Royles, Field CTO for EMEA at Cloudera, suggests the traditional concept of an “app” is becoming fluid. “In 2026, AI will start to radically change the way we think about apps, how they function and how they’re built.”
Users will soon request temporary modules generated by code and a prompt, effectively replacing dedicated applications. “Once that function has served its purpose, it closes,” Royles explains, noting these “disposable” apps can be built and rebuilt in seconds.
Rigorous governance is required here; organisations need visibility into the reasoning processes used to create these modules to ensure errors are corrected safely.
Data storage faces a similar reckoning, especially as AI becomes more autonomous. Wim Stoop, Director of Product Marketing at Cloudera, believes the era of “digital hoarding” is ending as storage capacity hits its limit.
“AI-generated data will become disposable, created and refreshed on demand rather than stored indefinitely,” Stoop predicts. Verified, human-generated data will rise in value while synthetic content is discarded.
Specialist AI governance agents will pick up the slack. These “digital colleagues” will continuously monitor and secure data, allowing humans to “govern the governance” rather than enforcing individual rules. For example, a security agent could automatically adjust access permissions as new data enters the environment without human intervention.
Sovereignty and the human element
Sovereignty remains a pressing concern for European IT. Red Hat’s survey data indicates 92 percent of IT and AI leaders in EMEA view enterprise open-source software as vital for achieving sovereignty. Providers will leverage existing data centre footprints to offer sovereign AI solutions, ensuring data remains within specific jurisdictions to meet compliance demands.
Emmet King, Founding Partner of J12 Ventures, adds that competitive advantage is moving from owning models to “controlling training pipelines and energy supply,” with open-source advancements allowing more actors to run frontier-scale workloads.
Workforce integration is becoming personal. Nick Blasi, Co-Founder of Personos, argues tools ignoring human nuance – tone, temperament, and personality – will soon feel obsolete. By 2026, Blasi predicts “half of workplace conflict will be flagged by AI before managers know it exists.”
These systems will focus on “communication, influence, trust, motivation, and conflict resolution,” Blasi suggests, adding that personality science will become the “operating system” for the next generation of autonomous AI, offering grounded understanding of human individuality rather than generic recommendations.
The era of the “thin wrapper” is over. Buyers are now measuring real productivity, exposing tools built on hype rather than proprietary data. For the enterprise, competitive advantage will no longer come from renting access to a model, but from controlling the training pipelines and energy supply that power it.
See also: BBVA embeds AI into banking workflows using ChatGPT Enterprise
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