logo
#

Latest news with #TPUv5

How your AI usage is impacting the environment
How your AI usage is impacting the environment

New Indian Express

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • New Indian Express

How your AI usage is impacting the environment

Meanwhile, companies are not required to disclose how much energy or water their AI systems use. They focus more on business metrics — speed, accuracy, and ROI. Rahul laments, 'The general public and policymakers are not aware of the effects of AI on the environment. They can't connect the dots about how generating one image or asking one question can affect the environment.' However, there's also a push toward efficiency. 'Companies are now looking at using low-power chips, better parallelism, and optimised training techniques,' states Rijin. Solutions ahead AI engineers and developers are looking for the blind spot and are trying to find solutions to solve the environmental puzzle. With AI, a general rule of thumb is: the bigger the model, the better the performance. Hence, the next-generation accelerators like NVIDIA's Blackwell series and Google's TPU v5 deliver up to twice the performance per watt compared to the previous generation. 'That improvement can cut the electricity needed for a given training run by 30 to 40 percent,' shares Harsh. At the same time, software techniques like model quantisation help reduce computation without sacrificing accuracy. 'When you combine those hardware and software gains, the energy needed per training job has dropped, but only partially. Model sizes and dataset scales continue to grow, so total consumption remains high,' adds the entrepreneur. While amends are being made for the future, the present is still in crisis. G Sundarrajan, an environmental activist with Poovulagin Nanbargal, says, 'AI has an impact on climate and global warming. People might say it is not direct. But the power consumption results in carbon emissions. We are talking about mitigating carbon emissions, and when you set up a data centre as a backbone, you need more power, which means you build more thermal power plants and more carbon emissions and more destruction.' As a solution to this rippling effect, Sowmya Dutta, trustee of Movement for Advancing Understanding of Sustainability and Mutuality (MAUSAM), suggests the government intervene. He mentions, 'The government should take recognition, and demand that the number of searches are brought down to a manageable energy level. There could be better algorithms to do this.' He adds that a policy should ensure that the energy utilised and released should be 'non-carbon, at least non-impactful waste.' Even before the government could step in, service providers are increasingly switching to renewables, air-cooling, and certified circular-economy recycling. While AI contributes to environmental challenges, it's also part of the solution by improving efficiency and reducing its impact. In Europe, some enterprise clients now ask about energy use and compliance with green standards, a step towards a less-destructive future. 'AI is being used to optimise cooling systems in data centres, predict energy loads, and even design more efficient chips. There's a kind of circular benefit here — AI can help monitor and reduce its own impact, if we design it with that goal in mind,' concludes Rijin. While you might be mindful of the water usage at home, consciously switch off lights and fans when not in use, and try to reduce your carbon footprint, you might still be contributing to environmental damage. From this World Environment Day, make it a point to pause before you ask the bots to write your assignments, help you get on an Instagram trend, or aid in coping with personal struggles, and reflect on the harm you might be causing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store