Energy-hungry AI is already harming health – and it's getting worse

New Scientist 

As data centres consume even more energy to serve the intensive computing needs of artificial intelligence, they could contribute to an estimated 600,000 asthma cases and 1300 premature deaths per year by 2030 – accounting for more than one third of asthma deaths annually in the US. "Public health impacts are direct and tangible impacts on people, and these impacts are substantial and not limited to a small radius of where data centres operate," says Shaolei Ren at the University of California, Riverside. "They affect people across the country." Ren and his colleagues, including Adam Wierman at the California Institute of Technology, developed those estimates based on data centres' projected electricity demand, which produces additional emissions and contributes to air pollution. For instance, the electricity usage required for training large AI models could produce air pollutants equivalent to driving a passenger car for more than 10,000 roundtrips between Los Angeles and New York City, according to the researchers.

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