AIs climate consequences are often overlooked
Date:
Sat, 08 Jul 2023 23:00:00 +0000
Description:
Large AI models gobble up large quantities of computing power in its development and use. Researchers estimated that the training of ChatGPT-3 emitted 552 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. Total emissions are likely
much higher. Getty Experts say the current hype ignores how AI contributes to emissions, misinformation, and fossil fuel production. The post AIs climate consequences are often overlooked appeared first on Popular Science .
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Large AI models gobble up large quantities of computing power in its development and use. Researchers estimated that the training of ChatGPT-3 emitted 552 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. Total emissions are likely
much higher. Getty
This story was originally published by Grist . Sign up for Grists weekly newsletter here .
This story was published in partnership with The Markup , a nonprofit, investigative newsroom that challenges technology to serve the public good. Sign up for its newsletters here .
Somethings fishy, declared a March newsletter from the right-wing, fossil fuel-funded think tank Texas Public Policy Foundation. The caption looms
under an imposing image of a stranded whale on a beach , with three huge offshore wind turbines in the background.
Something truly was fishy about that image. Its not because offshore wind causes whale deaths, a groundless conspiracy pushed by fossil fuel interests that the image attempts to bolster. Its because, as Gizmodo writer Molly Taft reported, the photo was fabricated using artificial intelligence. Along with eerily pixelated sand, oddly curved beach debris, and mistakenly fused together wind turbine blades, the picture also retains a tell-tale rainbow watermark from the artificially intelligent image generator DALL-E.
DALL-E is one of countless AI models that have risen to otherworldly levels
of popularity, particularly in the last year. But as hundreds of millions of users marvel at AIs ability to produce novel images and believable text, the current wave of hype has concealed how AI could be hindering our ability to make progress on climate change.
Advocates argue that these impactswhich include vast carbon emissions associated with the electricity needed to run the models, a pervasive use of AI in the oil and gas industry to boost fossil fuel extraction, and a
worrying uptick in the output of misinformationare flying under the radar. While many prominent researchers and investors have stoked fears around AIs godlike technological force or potential to end civilization, a slew of real-world consequences arent getting the attention they deserve.
Many of these harms extend far beyond climate issues, including algorithmic racism , copyright infringement , and exploitative working conditions for
data workers who help develop AI models . We see technology as an inevitability and dont think about shaping it with societal impacts in mind, David Rolnick, a computer science professor at McGill University and a co-founder of the nonprofit Climate Change AI, told Grist.
But the effects of AI, including its impact on our climate and efforts to curtail climate change, are anything but inevitable. Experts say we can and should confront these harmsbut first, we need to understand them. Large AI models produce an unknown amount of emissions
At its core, AI is essentially a marketing term, the Federal Trade Commission stated back in February. There is no absolute definition for what an AI technology is. But usually, as Amba Kak, the executive director of the AI Now Institute, describes , AI refers to algorithms that process large amounts of data to perform tasks like generating text or images, making predictions, or calculating scores and rankings.
That higher computational capacity means large AI models gobble up large quantities of computing power in its development and use. Take ChatGPT, for instance, the OpenAI chatbot that has gone viral for producing convincing, humanlike text. Researchers estimated that the training of ChatGPT-3, the predecessor to this years GPT-4, emitted 552 tons of carbon dioxide
equivalent equal to more than three round-trip flights between San Francisco and New York. Total emissions are likely much higher, since that number only accounts for training ChatGPT-3 one time through. In practice, models can be retrained thousands of times while they are being built.
The estimate also does not include energy consumed when ChatGPT is used by approximately 13 million people each day . Researchers highlight that
actually using a trained model can make up 90 percent of energy use
associated with an AI machine-learning model. And the newest version of ChatGPT, GPT-4, likely requires far more computing power because it is a much larger model.
No clear data exists on exactly how many emissions result from the use of large AI models by billions of users. But researchers at Google found that total energy use from machine-learning AI models accounts for about 15
percent of the companys total energy use. Bloomberg reports that amount would equal 2.3 terawatt-hours annuallyroughly as much electricity used by homes in a city the size of Atlanta in a year.
The lack of transparency from companies behind AI products like Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI means that the total amount of power and emissions
involved in AI technology is unknown. For instance, OpenAI has not disclosed what data was fed into this years ChatGPT-4 model, how much computing power was used, or how the chatbot was changed.
Were talking about ChatGPT and we know nothing about it, Sasha Luccioni, a researcher who has studied AI models carbon footprints, told Bloomberg . It could be three raccoons in a trench coat. AI fuels climate misinformation online
AI could also fundamentally shift the way we consumeand trustinformation online. The U.K. nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate tested Googles Bard chatbot and found it capable of producing harmful and false narratives around topics like COVID-19, racism, and climate change. For instance, Bard told one user, There is nothing we can do to stop climate change, so there is no point in worrying about it.
The ability of chatbots to spout misinformation is baked into their design, according to Rolnick. Large language models are designed to create text that looks good rather than being actually true, he said. The goal is to match the style of human language rather than being grounded in factsa tendency that lends itself perfectly to the creation of misinformation.
Google, OpenAI, and other large tech companies usually try to address content issues as these models are deployed live. But these efforts often amount to papered over solutions, Rolnick said. Testing their content more deeply, one finds these biases deeply encoded in much more insidious and subtle ways that havent been patched by the companies deploying the algorithms, he said.
Giulio Corsi, a researcher at the U.K.-based Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence who studies climate misinformation, said an even bigger concern is AI-generated images. Unlike text produced on an individual scale through a chatbot, images can spread very quickly and break the sense of
trust in what we see, he said. If people start doubting what they see in a consistent way, I think thats pretty concerning behavior.
Climate misinformation existed long before AI tools. But now, groups like the Texas Public Policy Foundation have a new weapon in their arsenal to launch attacks against renewable energy and climate policiesand the fishy whale
image indicates that theyre already using it. AIs climate impacts depend on whos using it, and how
Researchers emphasize that AIs real-world effects arent predeterminedthey depend on the intentions, and actions, of the people developing and using it. As Corsi puts it, AI can be used as both a positive and negative force when
it comes to climate change.
For example, AI is already used by climate scientists to further their research . By combing through huge amounts of data, AI can help create
climate models, analyze satellite imagery to target deforestation, and forecast weather more accurately. AI systems can also help improve the performance of solar panels, monitor emissions from energy production, and optimize cooling and heating systems, among other applications .
At the same time, AI is also used extensively by the oil and gas sector to boost the production of fossil fuels. Despite touting net-zero climate targets, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon have all come under fire for their lucrative cloud computing and AI software contracts with oil and gas
companies including ExxonMobil, Schlumberger, Shell, and Chevron.
A 2020 report by Greenpeace found that these contracts exist at every phase
of oil and gas operations. Fossil fuel companies use AI technologies to
ingest massive amounts of data to locate oil and gas deposits and create efficiencies across the entire supply chain, from drilling to shipping to storing to refining. AI analytics and modeling could generate up to $425 billion in added revenue for the oil and gas sector between 2016 and 2025, according to the consulting firm Accenture.
AIs application in the oil and gas sector is quite unambiguously serving to increase global greenhouse gas emissions by outcompeting low-carbon energy sources, said Rolnick.
Google spokesperson Ted Ladd told Grist that while the company still holds active cloud computing contracts with oil and gas companies, Google does not currently build custom AI algorithms to facilitate oil and gas extraction. Amazon spokesperson Scott LaBelle emphasized that Amazons AI software contracts with oil and gas companies focus on making their legacy businesses less carbon intensive, while Microsoft representative Emma Detwiler told
Grist that Microsoft provides advanced software technologies to oil and gas companies that have committed to net-zero emissions targets. There are currently no major policies to regulate AI
When it comes to how AI can be used, its the Wild West, as Corsi put it. The lack of regulation is particularly alarming when you consider the scale at which AI is deployed, he added. Facebook, which uses AI to recommend posts
and products, boasts nearly 3 billion users. Theres nothing that you could do at that scale without any oversight, Corsi saidexcept AI.
In response, advocacy groups such as Public Citizen and the AI Now Institute have called for the tech companies responsible for these AI products to be held accountable for AIs harms. Rather than relying on the public and policymakers to investigate and find solutions for AIs harms after the fact, AI Nows 2023 Landscape report calls for governments to place the burden on companies to affirmatively demonstrate that they are not doing harm.
Advocates and AI researchers also call for greater transparency and reporting requirements on the design, data use, energy usage, and emissions footprint
of AI models.
Meanwhile, policymakers are gradually coming up to speed on AI governance. In mid-June, the European Parliament approved draft rules for the worlds first law to regulate the technology. The upcoming AI Act, which likely wont be implemented for another two years, will regulate AI technologies according to their level of perceived risk to society. The draft text bans facial recognition technology in public spaces, prohibits generative language models like ChatGPT from using any copyrighted material, and requires AI models to label their content as AI-generated.
Advocates hope that the upcoming law is only the first step to holding companies accountable for AIs harms. These things are causing problems now, said Rick Claypool, research director for Public Citizen. And why theyre causing problems now is because of the way they are being used by humans to further human agendas.
This article originally appeared in Grist at
https://grist.org/technology/the-overlooked-climate-consequences-of-ai/ . Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org
The post AIs climate consequences are often overlooked appeared first on Popular Science . Articles may contain affiliate links which enable us to share in the revenue of any purchases made.
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