Page 6 - Frontier technologies to protect the environment and tackle climate change - Executive Summary
P. 6

Frontier technologies to protect the environment and tackle climate change




                      Frontier technology highlights

                      Reducing air pollution, hydrological risk or managing e-waste using AI

                      Biodiversity and conservation, ocean help, water security, smart cities, clean air and disaster risk
                      are just some of the areas in which AI systems can address climate change. They can perform
                      tasks in areas such as automated detection and monitoring, risk assessment and predictive
                      analysis – improving the accuracy of climate change models, forecasting scenarios, optimizing
                      energy and materials use, consumer awareness and behaviour ‘nudging’ towards sustainability
                      – for example by helping calculate individual carbon footprints, as well as quality control of data.
                      AI even has the potential to predict cloud formation; by resolving more complicated, smaller-
                      scale atmospheric processes, such as the ones involved in convective cloud formation, it can
                      help reduce this single biggest source of uncertainty in global climate models.


                      In cities, AI can help with route and traffic optimization, cutting waiting times, enabling better
                      traffic flows, facilitating autonomous and ride-sharing services (in effect cutting the number of
                      vehicles on roads and helping increase driver compliance with environmental regulations).

                      The report explores the case study of Moscow, where AI powered intelligent traffic control
                      systems help monitor traffic through an extensive network of smart traffic lights, vehicle sensors
                      and CCTV, controlling smart intersections and providing commuters with essential real-time
                      information on traffic, weather and pollution conditions.

                      Further case studies illustrate the use of AI in quantum computing, potentially offering AI at
                      unprecedented computing speeds. In Japan, AI is already helping to cut natural disaster risk,
                      with a prototype tsunami alert including an automatically launched drone sending alerts using
                      facial recognition software to identify victims. The UNESCO G-WADI (Water and Development
                      Information for Arid Lands – a Global Network) Geoserver application helps manage and
                      mitigate hydrological risk using artificial neural networks to estimate real-time precipitation
                      worldwide, informing emergency planning and flood management, preparing flood or drought
                      information bulletins, and tracking storms.

                      AI can also be applied to the waste sector, with innovations currently in operation across the
                      globe including smart recycling using robotic waste sorters, intelligent trash cans using AI and
                      IoT-enabled sensors to measure their contents and relay information to waste centres, or even
                      sort the waste and decide what to do with it. It is clear that AI systems can help in many areas,
                      although the report sounds a note of caution as there are still certain limitations that must be
                      addressed in terms of carbon footprint and efficiency in order for AI reach its full potential.


                      Using IoT for smart energy infrastructure management to help reduce carbon dioxide and
                      greenhouse gas emissions

                      Thanks to increasingly cost-effective IoT-enabled devices and systems, a multitude of new
                      opportunities for gathering vital data have opened up, with the potential to be used in
                      developed and developing countries alike.

                      From remote rural areas to the heart of busy cities, IoT sensors busily gather scientific data
                      to help mitigate climate change and promote energy efficiency. The report explores some
                      of the uses of IoT in the urban environment of Dubai, which uses a city-wide IoT network and
                      some 200 000 smart meters to help save water and energy. Its Green Dubai initiative helps
                      cut electricity and water usage, generate clean solar energy and encourage electric vehicle




                   2
   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11