I’ve programmed AI, and I haven’t yet been able to imagine a computer program which would actually be self-aware in the way that I experience self-awareness. I could model such a thing in data, and in theory pass a Turing test, but that would not mean that the program had consciousness the way animals do. And I would not expect it to develop psychic abilities or morphic fields the way most animals demonstrably do. This is because computers do things mechanically, based on electronic logic. There’s no reason I can think of why that would suddenly give rise to consciousness, any more than a computer game causes real-world events. Programs can represent things, but they don’t manifest those same things, unless hooked up to a projector.
Now, perhaps, if someone figures out how to make a device which manifests consciousness, and can create a meaningful computer interface for it, that might do something relevant to consciousness… but I would think that would be just putting information into an existing consciousness. We can already do that by playing video games, for example, but it doesn’t create a consciousness – it just gives an existing consciousness some input.
And ya, per previous answer, we also need to agree on definitions of intelligence and consciousness, before answering this question. I just used my own conceptions/experiences of consciousness.