The data hasn’t improved since then, although, fortunately, AI tools have vastly improved and offer new possibilities.
Exponential growth in big data and computing power is transforming climate science, where machine learning is playing a critical role in mapping the physics of our changing climate.
Precise, verifiable, and granular data is key to climate risk mitigation. Increasingly, artificial intelligence systems emerge as the preeminent tools for collecting and analyzing climate insights with unprecedented accuracy and scope.
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned that unchecked climate change and AI pose existential threats to humanity. He emphasized AI's potential disruptiveness to economies and insisted it should benefit humanity rather than dominate it.
Companies are looking into the ways in which AI can reduce humanity’s impact on areas such as agriculture, healthcare and environmental conservation
Billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson on Tuesday criticized U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the 2015 Paris climate deal aimed at tackling climate change. What Happened: “Powering the world with clean energy is common sense,
Microsoft invests $200 million in reforestation in Brazil. Teaming up with Re.green, the aim is to restore vital land and combat climate change.
In early January 2025, amid the wildfires in Los Angeles, multiple posts about the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on climate change circulated widely. Since LA is on fire and part of the south is frozen,
Sarah Kaizar’s AT Feed is an automated aggregate of current climate news and a critique of the future of information.
At the end of the day, an Nvidia scientist suggesting that AI can help solve these climate change-fueled fires feels akin (albeit on a smaller scale) to oil companies selling so-called "carbon ...
The decisions that companies make about how much to grow oil production are first and foremost going to be determined by market signals.”
Scientists warn that the Arctic is warming far more quickly than the rest of the world and that this rapid change significantly impacts species, glaciers, and the planet’s climate. In the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard,