Former Google CEO says climate goals are not meetable, so we might as well drop climate conservation — unshackle AI companies so AI can solve global warming

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt
(Image credit: Special Competitive Studies Project/YouTube)

When asked about how AI can reduce humanity’s existing and future energy demands, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt said during the Special Competitive Studies Project AI+Energy Summit that the demand for AI computing (this is its power requirement) is infinite and that the key point is “we’re not going to get there through conservation.”

The host then followed up with, “Do you think we can meet AI’s energy without total blowing out climate goals?” and Schmidt answered with, “We’re not going to hit the climate goals anyway because we’re not organized to do it — and the way to do it is with the ways that we’re talking about now — and yes, the needs in this area will be a problem. But I’d rather bet on AI solving the problem than constraining it and having the problem if you see my plan.”

It seems that the former Google chief favors dropping climate goals to ensure that AI companies will have enough power to drive their AI ambitions. Incidentally, this is happening now at Google, as its greenhouse gas emissions have jumped by 48% since 2019, primarily driven by its data center energy demands. Nevertheless, Schmidt recognizes our climate problem but believes that we shouldn’t let targets shackle AI development as we could use it to solve that problem. Besides, he says that we will not be able to meet the targets we’ve set anyway.

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The host then closed the interview by asking Schmidt about his top three action steps that the industry needs to take now, and he said, “More power that is predictable, that is base load or base load-equivalent, as soon as they can. They [AI companies] need more places to site, they need more ways of getting things built, and they need more things to get them connected.” In return, Schmidt promises that these AI companies will make energy generation systems at least 15% more efficient or maybe even better, telling the audience that “that’s a lot of money for a utility.”

While we’re achieving many gains in our clean energy and energy efficiency goals, it sounds reckless to abandon our greenhouse gas emissions targets to push AI development to its peak. After all, English economist William Jevons observed in 1865 that steam engine improvements, which made coal use more efficient, did not reduce fuel use. Instead, these advancements, which made steam engines cheaper to operate, increased demand for coal even more.

This occurrence, called Jevon’s Paradox, could still happen today with energy consumption and AI. If AI could make energy production at least 15% more efficient, demand could increase as energy prices drop. Even Schmidt said it himself, “The economics will drive it anyway. No large company wants to have a huge power bill.” He adds, “Most of the people I’ve talked with say [the] power bill is becoming a very large component of their expenses.”

Furthermore, are we sure we should rest our future on AI decisions? Hollywood has shown us many times how leaving the fate of humanity in the hands of AI (or even another form of intelligence) might not be a good idea.

Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • Sleepy_Hollowed
    Spoken like a true psycho.
    Reply
  • logainofhades
    This kinda stuff is how Skynet is born. AI will determine we are the problem and wipe us out.
    Reply
  • eichwana
    Something tells me he has stock in energy companies so it's his bottom line he's thinking about. Who cares if we don't have a planet to live on, so long as he's richer, right?
    Reply
  • DS426
    This idea of "throw everything we have at AI now and it will solve the problem before it's too late" notion is ridiculous. We don't need AI to tell us that we need to start changing things now to result in even lower impact down the road, i.e. many of our impactful systems have a lot of inertia. Moreover, AI isn't going to fix politics, so little wins need to be taken wherever they can be.

    Kind of tangential but this over-reliance on AI will just be speeding up idiocracy.
    Reply
  • Phaaze88
    We're totally screwed if we go that route...
    Reply
  • sauve.richard
    eichwana said:
    Something tells me he has stock in energy companies so it's his bottom line he's thinking about. Who cares if we don't have a planet to live on, so long as he's richer, right?
    This is EXACTLY what I was thinking.
    Reply
  • kkthebeast
    He is right, we cannot do it ourselves (if you even agree it needs to be done..., nor is even controllable by humans) either way the solution will be via advancements in science/engineering/methodology/material sciences and not via social means. There is nothing you can do to fix the problem without destroying QOL or freedoms. The solution WILL ONLY ever happen via innovation, optimization, atmosphere tech scrubbing on a tera forming level. Anything less is a smooth brain emotional response and an Utopian ideology at the absolute BEST. "IMHO" lol.
    Reply
  • hotaru251
    "it cant be met so might as wel lnot exist" - ex google guy

    So can't pay bills? might as well get rid of money right?

    Just becasue soemthign "cant be met" doesnt mean you drop it. it means you change so it CAN be met.
    Reply
  • watzupken
    And how does he think AI will help here? AI is a collection of human knowledge scrapped and gathered from whatever sources they can to train the it. So I am not sure what about AI that can meaningfully solve climate issues. Even if the AI comes out with a plan, it also requires commitment to get there, At the end of the day, you make a plan, you try and press on to see where you will land. You may not get there, but at least you may make some improvement. Instead, his idea is that you can't make it, so that's go the other way and make it worst. This is a seriously dumb comment.
    Reply
  • Notton
    That dude is so out of touch with reality.

    Climate change is not a binary solution, there are varying degrees of intensity.
    If we can't hit 2.5C, then our next goal should be 2.6C.

    Although, seeing as how this guy thinks, it's no wonder Google dumps the baby with the bathwater from their product stacks.
    Okay, I thought the obituary was shorter, that's a lot of things Google has killed.
    https://killedbygoogle.com/
    Reply