Description
For Sci-Fi buffs, a future infused with AI may evoke unsettling images of HAL from Stanley Kubrick's film, "2001: A Space Odyssey." In truth, the evolving technology of artificial intelligence may well be taking over, but not quite how the filmmakers envisioned it. This week on Sea Change Radio, we speak with Andrew Winston, a sustainability strategist and bestselling author, about what AI means for the climate. We look at how AI can help various key sectors of the global economy become more efficient, examine the dilemma of AI's seemingly insatiable energy needs, and discuss its potential to contribute to a carbon-free future.
Narrator | 00:02 - This is Sea Change Radio covering the shift to sustainability. I'm Alex Wise.
Andrew Winston | 00:17 - It is just, we don't really have time to work it through and double emissions and then come back down like, we're out of time on climate. So how do we make sure we're adding this without creating another big problem?
Narrator | 00:32 - For Sci-Fi buffs, a future infused with AI may evoke unsettling images of HAL from Stanley Kubrick's film, "2001: A Space Odyssey." In truth, the evolving technology of artificial intelligence may well be taking over, but not quite how the filmmakers envisioned it. This week on Sea Change Radio, we speak with Andrew Winston, a sustainability strategist and bestselling author, about what AI means for the climate. We look at how AI can help various key sectors of the global economy become more efficient, examine the dilemma of AI's seemingly insatiable energy needs, and discuss its potential to contribute to a carbon-free future.
Alex Wise | 01:32 - I am joined now on Sea Change Radio by Andrew Winston. Andrew is a sustainability strategist and a bestselling author. Andrew, welcome back to Sea Change Radio.
Andrew Winston | 01:42 - It's good to be here.
Alex Wise | 01:44 - So you contribute regularly to MIT Sloan's Management Review. Yep. And you have a recent piece on artificial intelligence ai, and it's entitled, will AI Help or Hurt Sustainability? Yes. People either talk about AI as either the end of humanity as we know it, or this wonderful life changing technology, or they just completely tune it out and don't want to know anything about it. What does that mean? So first, why don't you explain what AI is on the most basic level, and then we can dive into the sustainability conundrum.
Andrew Winston | 02:24 - Well, first it's a interesting question. What is AI? So there's a long piece in MIT technology review recently called What is AI? And it's a long article that basically comes to the conclusion of nobody really knows, and people use the phrase in many, many different ways. The way that author described it was, AI is a set of technologies that make computers do things that are thought to require intelligence when done by people. So it just means there's things happening. It seems to be thinking even though at this point it really isn't and seems to do kind of magical things, right? So the, the, the everyday interaction that we have with it, which is growing by the way, if people use, have used chat GPTs, you can, you can make it do fun things like write a poem about, you know, mid medieval times. But I use it to look at my writing and say, Hey, what's a summary of this? Or What would you title this? Or, what are five things I should think about in this topic? And it's just a really good partner, but it's clearly getting embedded into companies of all stripes in every sector, and the hype about it and what it's going to do for companies and potentially for, you know, our biggest challenges and, and the planet, the hype's really big, but it's unclear yet what's living up to the hype. And, and there's some downsides which we, which we can go into. But look, I think it's a really big deal. I think it's, it's one of those technologies, when I first started playing with it, um, I had that same feeling like when I first Goo