Do Not Be Evil. Dolphins, Polar Bears, and Snail Darters? Tough Luck

June 30, 2025

dino-orange_thumb_thumb_thumb_thumb_No AI, just the dinobaby expressing his opinions to Zillennials.

The Guardian comes up with some interesting “real” news stories. “Google’s Emissions Up 51% As AI Electricity Demand Derails Efforts to Go Green” reports:

Google’s carbon emissions have soared by 51% since 2019 as artificial intelligence hampers the tech company’s efforts to go green.

The juicy factoid in my opinion is:

The [Google] report also raises concerns that the rapid evolution of AI may drive “non-linear growth in energy demand”, making future energy needs and emissions trajectories more difficult to predict.

Folks, does the phrase “brown out” resonate with you? What about “rolling blackout.” If the “non-linear growth” thing unfolds, the phrase “non-linear growth” may become synonymous with brown out and rolling blackout.

As a result, the article concludes with this information, generated without plastic, by Google:

Google is aiming to help individuals, cities and other partners collectively reduce 1GT (gigaton) of their carbon-equivalent emissions annually by 2030 using AI products. These can, for example, help predict energy use and therefore reduce wastage, and map the solar potential of buildings so panels are put in the right place and generate the maximum electricity.

Will Google’s thirst or revenue-driven addiction harm dolphins, polar bears, and snail darters? Answer: We aim to help dolphins and polar bears. But we have to ask our AI system what a snail darter is.

Will the Googley smart software suggest that snail darters just dart at snails and quit worrying about their future?

Stephen E Arnold, June 30, 2025

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