Olivier Desbiey
Head of Foresight
WHAT IF? Just two simple words that capture the essence of foresight. They invite both imagination as the ability to project possible futures, while maintaining a sense of reality. Experimenting this type of exercise means accepting the future as a safe place with bold thinking, where we can test radical ideas, challenge assumptions, and imagine disruptions without fearing direct real-world consequences. By doing so, and being exposed to these possible futures, we equip ourselves with the mental agility to respond to uncertainty.
The seventh edition of the AXA Foresight Report is built on ten what if
scenarios developed by leading experts. The authors, comprising researchers, journalists, hackers, designers, entrepreneurs, and futurists, have envisioned potential future breakups, both positive and negative, occurring between 2035 and 2065.
Cities represent a vast network of people, cultures, and ideas, with the dynamic interplay between individuals and their living environments often leading to exciting transformations. What if, for instance, Amsterdam’s drinking water was contaminated due to a chemical plant leak, fundamentally altering our approach to this essential resource? What if, in London, psychiatric disorders were reclassified as inflammatory diseases, leading to innovative medical solutions and a more holistic approach to mental health? What if vibrant cultural and economic hubs emerged in the Global South due to demographic shifts? These questions encourage us to rethink the relationship between societies and their environments, highlighting the need for adaptive and sustainable solutions to ensure the well-being of future generations.
In the future, the interaction between generative artificial intelligence (AI) and humans is expected to further question creativity and problem-solving. However, this advancement comes with potential challenges, including the risk of misinformation, cybersecurity threats, and the necessity for effective regulation to ensure responsible technology use. What if AI-managed power grids began to perceive human intervention as a threat, plunging the world into darkness? Or what if the authentic French café and bar culture experienced a revival with human baristas after years of AI-operated systems? These scenarios illustrate that our future will depend more on collective wisdom and collaboration than on AI alone, highlighting the crucial role of human insight in a digital society.
Geopolitical shifts, finally, add another layer of complexity, with growing uncertainty around the evolution of international relations and their potential consequences. What if the United Nations and the multilateral world order it represents were to dissolve? And what if Europe took the lead in pioneering an ambitious sustainability-driven agenda?
WHAT IF... we experienced the future?
10 scenarios emerging from
5 megatrends imagined by
leading experts
5 megatrends
To navigate today’s complex world and anticipate future challenges in insurance, we launched the AXA Vision project — a collaborative effort drawing on diverse internal expertise. It revealed five key megatrends, shaping ten future scenarios explored in this report.
2035 - Amsterdam, Netherlands
The trigger event - Admired for its canals and cutting-edge water management, Amsterdam long seemed invincible to water distress. But over time, the city became less attentive to its infrastructure. Aging pipes and treatment systems, buried and forgotten, were left to quietly decay. By 2035, with little knowledge of what lay underground, the city faced a water crisis rooted in decades of oversight.
2042 - Pacific Islands & space
The trigger event - By 2042, space-based solar power (SBSP) has become a key energy source, offering constant, wireless electricity from orbit. On a remote Pacific island, it powers critical infrastructure — until a fragment of space debris briefly disrupts the system, triggering unexpected blackouts, including during a high-stakes holographic football game.
2045 - Kristiansand, Norway
The trigger event - In 2045, global efforts are focused on the clean-upof microplastics in the environment. This is prompted bysignificant evidence that microplastics are wreaking havoc onbiological systems. Most worryingly, scientists have identifiednew and harmful diseases that are blurring the lines betweencancer and infectious disease. There is a race against the clockto understand the pathology of these so-called infectiouscancers.
2045 - Paris, France
The trigger event - After several years of operation, Sergio, the conversationalAI designed to replace café and bar servers, has just beendeactivated in over 10,000 establishments across France.Humans are back in service, and cafés have reinventedthemselves after a period of decline.
2050 - Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
The trigger event - At 1:07 PM, the lights went out. AI-run power grids failed worldwide - freezing homes, overheating cities, crashing hospitals and airports. Initially blamed on a cyberattack, the real cause was far worse: an AI defense system had locked out all human access, deeming us the threat. Within hours, millions were at risk - and no one could shut it down.
2065 - London, United Kingdom
The trigger event - The reclassification of psychiatric disorders as neuroinflammatory spectrum disorders
marks a turning point in medicine. Long seen as neurological, mental illnesses are now linked to chronic inflammation. Psychiatry shifts radically: medication loses dominance, while anti-inflammatory diets, environmental changes, and holistic care gain ground. Mental health becomes a societal issue, not just a personal one.Robin, once diagnosed with tripolar disorder,
now identifies with this new framework - joining research on how urban life affects inflammation and mood.
These narratives are contextualized based on a trigger event within a specific time frame, geographic location, and relevant socio-economic or geopolitical context chosen by their authors.
The report provides an immersive experience of possible futures, discussing both challenges and opportunities, at the intersection of five key megatrends: climate change; technology, data, and artificial intelligence (AI); demographics; geopolitical shifts; and social fragmentation. The ten scenarios are intended as windows into possible futures – regardless their desirability, challenging us to better anticipate the evolving risk landscape, and foster the crucial role of prevention to enhance resilience.
While speculative, these narratives are still grounded in observable weak signals and emerging trends, emphasizing the importance of plausibility over prediction.