Latest News

UN Chief calls on AI companies to be transparent about environmental costs

On Tuesday, the United Nations urged major artificial intelligence companies to disclose their full environmental costs and use renewable energy in their data centres. He also launched a transparency project for the sector.

Environmental groups have criticized the rapid growth of data centres to fuel AI for their excessive energy and water use and lack of transparency.

In a speech at London Climate Action Week, U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres stated that by 2030 they could use enough power to satisfy the basic needs for all 1.3 billion sub-Saharan Africans for an entire year.

As he launched the U.N. AI Environmental Transparency Initiative, he called on AI companies to measure and?disclose? their water, carbon and lands use impacts as well as commit to powering data centres with'renewable energy' by 2030.

He said that if AI is going to be a part of building a better world, it has to be open about the costs it incurs now.

AI firms currently rely on voluntary net zero commitments and targets for renewable electricity to decarbonise operations. Many are also turning towards gas or touting the nuclear power source as a new energy?source.

Guterres stated that the world is still not on track to reach global climate goals, and criticized voices who call for increased fossil fuel use.

He said that deploying more renewable power projects to electrify buildings, transport and industry was one of the fastest ways to reduce emissions and stop relying on imported fossil fuels.

CALL FOR ACTION ON METHANE

Guterres launched an action call on methane emission, which included asking fossil-fuel companies to fix any leaks and stop flaring routinely.

He said that methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, is responsible for around a third of the current global warming.

Guterres announced that he will convene world leaders ahead of the U.N. Climate Conference (COP31) in Turkey will help to drive forward a just transition away from fossil-fuels. (Reporting by Susanna Twidale, Editing by Raju Gopikrishnan).

(source: Reuters)