Press Releases May 28, 2026 04:00 AM

Willis: Leaders must move from caution to control as AI reshapes risk and resilience

Willis Towers Watson underscores urgent need for robust AI governance amid rapid integration of AI in insurance risk management

By Sofia Navarro WTW

Willis Towers Watson highlights the rapid integration of AI across underwriting, claims, and cyber defense, urging businesses to adopt responsible governance frameworks to manage emerging risks related to accountability, liability, and insurability. The company emphasizes AI's transformation of risk landscapes and the pressing need for leaders to move from cautious adoption to active control to maintain resilience and competitive advantage.

Willis: Leaders must move from caution to control as AI reshapes risk and resilience
WTW

Key Points

  • AI is embedded in multiple insurance lines, including underwriting and claims, raising new challenges in liability and insurability.
  • Insurance market responses vary, with some firms relying on traditional policies while others introduce specific AI risk coverage and enhanced governance.
  • Cyber risk is escalating with rising cybercrime costs, driving increased use of AI for threat detection and continuous monitoring across industries.

LONDON, May 28, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- AI is rapidly reshaping how risk is understood, priced and managed, but the rate of adoption is outpacing existing AI governance frameworks. New research from the latest Risk and Resilience review by Willis, a WTW business (NASDAQ: WTW) highlights how AI is being embedded across underwriting, claims, cyber defence, and operational decision-making. This growing integration is introducing new challenges around accountability, liability and insurability.

The challenge now facing businesses is the responsible adoption of AI. Many organisations are already relying on systems they cannot fully interrogate, placing trust in outputs that are not always challenged. The result is a subtle yet significant shift in how risk is created, distributed and, in some cases, amplified.

Key takeaways include:

  • AI is already embedded across underwriting, claims, and cyber defence: Exposure is already building across multiple lines, while questions of liability, accountability and insurability are still being worked through. More than 700 million people now use leading AI systems every week, embedded into operational infrastructure, shaping customer interactions and executive decision-making.
  • Market shift towards clearer AI risk coverage: The insurance market is diverging, with some insurers and brokers still relying on traditional policy wording and “silent AI” assumptions, while others are introducing affirmative AI cover and strengthening underwriting requirements tied to governance and control frameworks.
  • AI risk is becoming a governance and liability issue: Some of the most immediate impacts of AI are being seen in core insurance processes. It is no longer a primarily technology issue; it has become a governance, liability and insurability challenge spanning legal doctrine, regulation, and operational oversight.
  • The role of risk leaders: Cyber risk is becoming more adaptive and harder to benchmark: global cybercrime costs have risen from roughly US$3 trillion in 2015 to a projected US$10.5 trillion annually by 2025, increasing pressure on organisations to adopt AI-enhanced threat detection and continuous cyber monitoring.

Spike Lipkin, Chief AI Officer, Willis, said: “AI is already reshaping the risk landscape in real time, but many organisations are moving forward without fully understanding the systems they rely on. That creates a dangerous gap between innovation and oversight. Business leaders need to recognise that this is no longer just a technology issue, but a governance, liability and trust challenge. Those who stay passive risk falling behind both in resilience and competitiveness. Leaders must be vigilant, challenge outputs, and invest in robust governance frameworks that bring transparency and accountability to how AI is deployed.”

The full report can be downloaded here.

About WTW 

At WTW (NASDAQ: WTW), we provide data-driven, insight-led solutions in the areas of people, risk and capital. Leveraging the global view and local expertise of our colleagues serving 140 countries and markets, we help organizations sharpen their strategy, enhance organizational resilience, motivate their workforce and maximize performance.

Working shoulder to shoulder with our clients, we uncover opportunities for sustainable success—and provide perspective that moves you. 

Media contact
Lauren David
[email protected] / +44 7385 947619


Risks

  • Rapid AI adoption without full understanding creates gaps in oversight, potentially leading to accountability and legal liabilities, especially in financial and insurance sectors.
  • Uncertain regulatory and governance frameworks for AI deployment pose operational and insurability challenges across multiple sectors.
  • Growing cybercrime costs and adaptive threats increase pressure on organizations to effectively manage cyber risks using AI-enhanced systems, with failure exposing firms to significant losses.

More from Press Releases

LiqTech International Announces Pricing of $20 Million Underwritten Public Offering of Common Stock Jun 4, 2026 Correction: Keystone Acquisition Corp. Announces Closing of $287.5 Million Initial Public Offering Including Exercise of Underwriters’ Over-Allotment Option Jun 4, 2026 Verizon declares quarterly dividend on June 4, 2026 Jun 4, 2026 AmperCap Acquisition Company Completes its $125,000,000 Initial Public Offering Jun 4, 2026 Algoma Steel Releases 2025 Sustainability Report Jun 4, 2026