From optimizing electricity grids to predicting weather patterns, artificial intelligence and big data could play a major role in decarbonizing the global economy. But without new frameworks and rules of the road, digital technologies could end up doing more harm than good for the climate.
LONDON β Long before the real-world effects of climate change became so abundantly obvious, the data painted a bleak picture β in painful detail β of the scale of the problem. For decades, carefully collected data on weather patterns and sea temperatures were fed into models that analyzed, predicted, and explained the effects of human activities on our climate. And now that we know the alarming answer, one of the biggest questions we face in the next few decades is how data-driven approaches can be used to overcome the climate crisis.
LONDON β Long before the real-world effects of climate change became so abundantly obvious, the data painted a bleak picture β in painful detail β of the scale of the problem. For decades, carefully collected data on weather patterns and sea temperatures were fed into models that analyzed, predicted, and explained the effects of human activities on our climate. And now that we know the alarming answer, one of the biggest questions we face in the next few decades is how data-driven approaches can be used to overcome the climate crisis.