UN: AI will use as much water as 1.3B humans by 2030
Oh, look, another tech miracle! While tech bros promise that AI will solve global warming, it turns out their massive server farms are preparing to literally drink us dry. Let's look at the real price of your generated anime pictures.
The United Nations University's water institute (UNU-INWEH) dropped a massive buzzkill of a report about the true environmental cost of our current AI obsession. It turns out that besides spewing carbon, these glowing server racks have a monstrous appetite for fresh water to keep from melting. By 2030, keeping these silicon brains cool will require as much water as the basic annual needs of 1.3 billion people, which is roughly the entire population of Sub-Saharan Africa.
The electricity numbers are equally insane, with these facilities projected to eat up 945 terawatt-hours per year by the end of the decade. That is three times the combined power consumption of Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nigeria, where over 650 million actual humans live. To house all this humming hardware, tech companies will gobble up over 14.4 square kilometers of land, which is basically Sydney-sized terrain dedicated purely to hosting computer chips.
If anyone thinks swapping coal for green energy will magically fix this, lead researcher Miriam Aczel has some bad news. Switching to something like bioenergy might slash the carbon footprint by 70%, but it skyrockets water consumption by 30 times and land use by 100 times.
The race for artificial superintelligence is quickly turning into a very real survival game where humans might literally starve and dehydrate just so some LLM can write mediocre marketing emails. It seems the future isn't a sci-fi utopia, but rather a giant, boiling server room surrounded by a desert.
Source: UNU-INWEH
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