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AI is supposed to make us more efficient, but it could mean we waste more energy

 7 months ago
source link: https://techxplore.com/news/2024-01-ai-efficient-energy.html
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January 29, 2024

AI is supposed to make us more efficient, but it could mean we waste more energy

by Felippa Amanta, The Conversation

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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

The European Union is negotiating an Artificial Intelligence Act, the world's first comprehensive law that aims to regulate artificial intelligence (AI) based on the risk it poses to individuals, society and the environment.

However, discussions of AI overlook one significant environmental risk: a potential increase in energy consumption from using it in everyday activities. Without acknowledging this risk, the development of AI may contribute to the climate emergency.

AI can be a double-edged sword. It can be a powerful tool for climate action, improving the efficiency of the energy grid, modeling climate change predictions or monitoring climate treaties. But the infrastructure needed to run AI is energy- and resource-intensive. "Training" a large language model such as OpenAI's GPT-3, a popular AI-powered chatbot, requires lots of electricity to power data centers that then need lots of water to cool down.

In fact, the true scale of AI's impact on the environment is probably underestimated, especially if we focus only on the direct carbon footprint of its infrastructure. Today, AI permeates almost all aspects of our digitalized daily lives. Businesses use AI to develop, market and deliver products, content and services more efficiently, and AI influences how we search, shop, socialize and organize our everyday lives.

These changes have massive implications for our total energy consumption at a time when we need to actively reduce it. And it's not yet clear that AI will support us in making more climate-positive choices.

How AI is changing us

AI can indirectly change how much energy we use by changing our activities and behavior—for instance, by completing tasks more efficiently or by substituting analog tools like physical maps with their digital equivalents. However, things can backfire if convenience and lower costs simply spur demand for more goods or services. This is known as a "rebound effect," and when the rebound effect is larger than the energy saving, it leads to greater energy use overall. Whether AI leads to more or less energy use will depend on how we adapt to using it.

For example, AI-powered smart home systems can improve energy efficiency by controlling heating and appliances. A smart heating system is estimated to reduce gas consumption by around 5%. Home energy management and automation could even reduce households' CO₂ consumption by up to 40%.

However, a more efficient and comfortably heated home can make people stay at home more often with the heating on. People may also have increased comfort expectations of a warmer house and pre-warming of spaces. A study on smart homes found that people purchase and use additional smart devices to increase control and comfort, rather than to use less energy.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


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