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IP Osgoode tackles AI and the Environment in "Bracing for Impact" Webinar

Full panel of speakers

Photo Credit: Ashley Moniz

Ali MesbahianAli Mesbahian is an IPilogue Writer and a 2L JD Candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School.

On June 28, 2021, IP Osgoode hosted a panel discussion in their Bracing for Impact Webinar Series titled AI鈥檚 Dirty Footprint. Organized in collaboration with the Harry Radzyner Law School at IDC Herzliya in Israel, Microsoft Canada, and Alectra's GRE&T Centre, the central question of this webinar was: in what way can we use artificial intelligence (AI) to ensure that the negative impacts of its energy consumption do not exceed its beneficial effects for environmental sustainability?

IP Osgoode鈥檚 own Professor Giuseppina (Pina) D鈥橝gostino opened the panel by setting the stage for the discussion and introducing the speakers.听

In his opening remarks, Dr. Amir Asif, Vice President of Research and Innovation at 91亚色, noted that AI remains a 鈥渒ey strategic area鈥 for research at 91亚色. Emphasizing the need for an interdisciplinary approach, Dr. Asif also stated that exploring AI鈥檚 ethical and legal implications will require collaboration between researchers in the AI community, social sciences, and the humanities.

Indeed, 鈥渃ollaboration鈥 was one common thread among all the speakers. In his first formal address since he took office, the Hon. David Piccini鈥擮ntario Minister of the Environment, Conservation and Parks鈥攖urned not only to universities for ideas in using AI to improve the climate situation, but also to youth as part of the government鈥檚 broader environmental policy plan. The youth, he noted, must be 鈥渦napologetically engaged鈥. Given the , the Minister鈥檚 words are welcome if they signal any change.

The panel then proceeded to a discussion moderated by Dr. Aviv Gaon, professor at IDC Herzliya. In his introduction, Gaon brought attention to that outlines 17 internationally-agreed-upon sustainable development goals for 2030, spread across 169 targets. With respect to the environment, the study shows that AI鈥檚 potential to enable the environmental targets of these 17 goals outweighs its inhibitory effects.

The first panelist was Andrea Roszell, Director of Energy, Sustainability and Infrastructure at Guidehouse. Her discussion was centred on AI鈥檚 capabilities to increase efficiency in the energy and utility sector. In particular, she pointed to the 鈥渆nergy cloud鈥, a concept developed at Guidehouse that moves away from a 鈥渙ne-way flow鈥 of power from energy centers to consumers, to a more networked, interconnected 鈥渕ulti-flow鈥 dynamic. This requires an infrastructure鈥攁 neural grid鈥攖hat utilizes artificial intelligence in technology, such as sensors software and monitoring systems, to create large 鈥渄ata sets鈥 for utilities to access. Despite requiring increased energy consumption, Roszell stated that these data sets are a net benefit to the environment due to the new efficiency gained in management of greenhouse gases and predictive maintenance models that ultimately lead to a more sustainable and reliant energy infrastructure.

The second panelist was Dr. Audrey Lee, Senior Director of Energy Strategy at Microsoft. She started by pointing to Among other goals, Dr. Lee highlighted Microsoft鈥檚 plan to offset all of its electricity usage with renewable energy by 2025 and to be carbon negative by 2050. Lee noted, however, that the first step in achieving any such goal is to establish a proficient 鈥渕easurement infrastructure鈥 that can enable us to quantify our environmental footprint with sufficient precision鈥攆or example, data analytics that detail how and to what extent a particular utility uses electricity at each hour.

The panel then continued to its third speaker, Kapil Singhal, Co-Founder & CEO of Vyntelligence. At the very outset of his discussion, he too emphasized the need for collaboration. In particular, Singhal noted how Vyntelligence has made possible a new form collaboration between artificial intelligence and human brain power. Utilizing short videos of workflow in the field, artificial intelligence can augment workers鈥 awareness of a given project by revealing further areas of risk and benefit. This, when combined with human cognitive and decision-making power (which Singhal noted far exceeds what AI can learn), will yield more efficient outcomes. One such outcome is enhancing the infrastructure that allows for remote work (the importance of which is vividly felt in times of COVID-19), reducing thereby the carbon footprint of work-related travel.听

Finally, the panel featured Neetika Sathe, Vice President of the GRE&T Centre at Alectra Inc. First, she noted that as more and more people gain access to the internet, global energy consumption is bound to increase. Thus, she emphasized the need for international collaboration beyond local efforts. She further mentioned that about half of the energy used at datacentres is used to cool their servers, which brings attention to the need for more efficient infrastructures.

In closing, it is important to address that, as the panelists mentioned, data centres account for only 1-2% of global energy consumption. However, as I mentioned in , AI鈥檚 鈥渄irty footprint鈥 is not confined to the energy it consumes, but extends to its ability to offer services for resource extraction which, for example, is enabled by the connection and collaboration between the tech and fossil fuel industries. Any meaningful policy directed at reducing AI鈥檚 negative environmental impacts must also account for this broader perspective.

A link to watch a recording of the event can be found on IP Osgoode's page.