Course in | "Artificial Intelligence in Occupational Health and Safety. Ethical Principles, Transparency, and Obligations under Law 132/2025<br> Responsibility, Limitations, and Regulatory Compliance in AI Usage" | Safety Expo Occupational Health and Safety 2026  

Artificial Intelligence in Occupational Health and Safety. Ethical Principles, Transparency, and Obligations under Law 132/2025
Responsibility, Limitations, and Regulatory Compliance in AI Usage

Artificial Intelligence in Occupational Health and Safety. Ethical Principles, Transparency, and Obligations under Law 132/2025
Responsibility, Limitations, and Regulatory Compliance in AI Usage

OCCUPATIONAL HEALT AND SAFETY COURSE REFRESHER HOURS 81/08 
WEDNESDAY 16 SEPTEMBER 2026
09:15 - 11:15

COURSE ROOM 8

PAV. B – LANE B4

Edited by: Istituto INFORMA

Artificial Intelligence is increasingly entering health and safety processes in the workplace, but its adoption cannot be treated solely as a technological matter. Every AI application—especially when it impacts people, work organization, assessments, monitoring, or decision support—demands careful attention to ethical profiles, transparency, human oversight, and regulatory compliance.
In Italy, Law No. 132 of September 23, 2025, introduced a national framework for AI principles and governance in alignment with the European AI Act. Central references include transparency, proportionality, security, personal data protection, accuracy, non-discrimination, and sustainability. Furthermore, the law regulates specific areas, including labor and industrial relations, and designates AgID (Agency for Digital Italy) and ACN (National Cybersecurity Agency) as the national authorities responsible for notification, monitoring, and oversight.
This course offers a clear and operational interpretation of this landscape, helping participants understand where the benefits of automation end and where responsibilities, limits, and obligations begin.
The objective is to provide useful criteria for evaluating the use of AI within organizational contexts and prevention processes, avoiding both naive enthusiasm and preconceived rejection. The goal is to promote an adoption that is conscious, documentable, and consistent with the current regulatory framework.
The EU AI Act follows a risk-based approach, with more stringent requirements for high-risk systems and full general applicability from August 2, 2026, while certain provisions are already in force.

Valid as a 2-hour refresher course in accordance with Legislative Decree 81/08, in collaboration with the University of Roma Tre
Final test completion is mandatory for certification.


Speakers: 
Ing. Fabrizio Bolognesi, Aerospace Engineer with over twenty years of experience in sales and organizational management in multinational companies. Safety trainer. Expert in integrating Artificial Intelligence into organizations

€ 30,00 (+IVA)