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Tech and AI Are Changing the Climate Equation for the Worse

Lowy Institute

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Date Published
19 Nov 2024
Priority Score
2
Australian
Yes
Created
8 Mar 2025, 01:04 pm

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Summary

The article highlights how AI and technological advancements are complicating efforts to meet climate commitments due to the substantial energy demands and emissions linked to AI technologies. It points out that AI's growing power consumption poses a significant challenge for climate goals, with emissions from tech giants like Google and Microsoft rising significantly. The article discusses the potential for AI to aid climate efforts through improved monitoring and energy optimization but emphasizes the current trend's unsustainable path. It also touches on geopolitical tensions and the potential for policy shifts that could either exacerbate or mitigate these challenges. While primarily focused on climate change, the article indirectly raises concerns about the governance of AI technologies and their implications for environmental safety.

Body

Listen to this articleAt an inflection point where the world needs to reverse trends in emissions and energy consumption, AI is making it more difficult to meet climate commitments.Over the weekend at COP29 in Baku, leadersendorsed a declarationto use digital tech and AI to accelerate climate action. However, key to this is curbing the emissions that result from the technology sector, reducing its manufacturing footprint, and tackling the growing problems of AI’s power appetite and e-waste.At the first UN Climate Change Conference in 1995, digital technology was not on the agenda. Back then, the internet was used by less than 1% of the world’s population and the tech impact was negligible. By 2022, 166 tech companies generatednearly 1% of global greenhouse gas emissions, equivalent to one of the top 25 emitting countries. Ten of those companies accounted foralmost 1% of global electricityconsumption.A single query via ChatGPT reportedly takes ten times the energy as a Google search.Tech and AI are changing the climate equation. Greenhouse gas emissions from some of the largest tech companies have already risenby about 50% in five years. Their electricity consumption hasmore than doubled. Some analysis suggests emissions from Google, Microsoft, Meta and Apple may be7.62 times higher than official tallies.The energy generation and access requirements for AI are exponential. A single query via ChatGPT reportedly takesten times the energy of a Google search– 2.9Wh vs 0.3Wh. If not addressed, the skyrocketing growth of AI and cloud computing will derail climate commitments as tech company net-zero roadmaps are shredded and data centres ratchet up energy supply requirements.Google, for example, has dropped its long standing carbon-neutral promise, following a spike in emissions driven by its pursuit of AI, according to a 2024 environmentalreport. Since 2023, Google has no longer “maintained operational carbon neutrality” according to the report.Keeping global warming within 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels – the tipping point for catastrophic climate change – requires deep, rapid reductions by countries, industries, communities, and individual consumers. Global emissionsneed to be cut by almost halfby 2030, or9% every year, yet they are still growing.Tech company net-zero roadmaps are being shredded as data centres ratchet up energy supply requirements (UN Climate Change - Habib Samadov)Despite pledges at COP28 a year ago, the burning of coal, oil and gas continued to rise in 2024 asemissions hit new highs.UN Secretary-General António Guterres’remarksat the opening of COP29 remind us of some progress. Last year – and for the first time – theamount invested in greens and renewables overtook the amount spent on fossil fuels. And almost everywhere, solar and wind are the cheapest sources of electricity. So, doubling down on fossil fuels is absurd.The clean energy revolution is here, yet its transition is ageopolitical scramble to secure transformative technologies. Across the globe, renewables provide an increasing proportion of energy. However, they are not without their own issues and supply variability. Grid stability, baseload requirements and storage are part of the reason thecontroversial nuclear debateis raging in Australia ahead of the election. Microsoft, Google and Amazon are themselves looking tonuclear powerto provide low emissions electricity as AI booms.Tech and AI offer some opportunities in climate monitoring, mitigation and adaption. Climate monitoring has improved significantly using AI analysis of satellite imagery, for example in measuringiceberg change,deforestation, water management and wildlife conservation. Climate mitigation measures could include use of AI tooptimise energy usageand eventransform energy from commodity to technology. While climate adaptioncould benefitfrom AI-enabled early warning indicators.So where to from here?We need to reimagine our digital future to ensure it aids our climate efforts, rather than hinders them.Big picture, the worst case is a retreat from multilateralism and a focus on sovereign security at the expense of climate commitments.What this looks like is states focusing on strategic advantage for their own nation ignoring the current and future impacts. Examples might includeelevatingenergy generation to “national security” status, along with water, needed in increasing volume to cool computing systems. Or the tech competition could further the exploitation of natural resources, clean water and arable land at the expense of biodiversity, ignoring climate goals.President-elect Donald Trump isexpected to withdrawfrom the Paris Agreement, again, and promote fossil fuels (“drill, baby, drill”). However, Trump, as always, is a wildcard – not all his rhetoric makes it to policy.Undoubtedly, the United States is a key player (both as an emitter and fighter of climate change), however hundreds of nations have adopted the legally binding 2015 Paris Agreement. But the US government will probably sit this one out at a crucial inflection point for climate. Global leadership will have to come from somewhere else – others must guide the way.The best-case scenario is radical change to stop catastrophic climate change, now. We are on the cusp offive catastrophic climate tipping points.There is global public consensus. The largest ever public opinion survey on climate change, thePeoples’ Climate Vote 2024, shows 80% of people want their governments to take stronger action to tackle the climate crisis. More than 73,000 people, speaking 87 different languages across 77 countries weresurveyed.It has been argued that as Meta allows military agencies to access its AI software, itposes a moral dilemma for everybody who uses it. We may well soon be asking the same question in relation to climate. We need to reimagine our digital future to ensure it aids our climate efforts, rather than hinders them.