Tools
Change country:

Your AI-powered iPhone comes with a questionable carbon footprint

The Apple Store in New York City glows like the new Siri, powered by Apple Intelligence, ahead of the iPhone 16 launch in September. | Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images

Apple just put AI in millions of people’s pockets. The company is rolling out what it calls Apple Intelligence this week, bringing some basic text generation and image editing features to iPhone, iPad, and Mac users who opt in. I’ve been testing these tools through the developer beta version of the software for a couple months now, and they’re pretty mediocre. But this is only the beginning. 

Generative AI, once a parlor trick for the tech-obsessed, is fast becoming the main event for major software releases. As Apple pushes its version of the technology, Google is building AI into its Android operating system and forcing everyone to look at AI Overviews at the top of virtually every Google Search. OpenAI and Meta are building their own AI-powered search engines, while the startup Perplexity already has one. Microsoft and Anthropic recently announced new, super-powerful AI agents that can complete complex tasks much like humans would. (Disclosure: Vox Media is one of several publishers that has signed partnership agreements with OpenAI. Our reporting remains editorially independent.)

While some companies have had generative AI products out in the wild for over a year, the arrival of Apple Intelligence marks an inflection point for the mainstreaming of the technology. Apple Intelligence is only available on the latest Apple devices, but over half the phones in the United States are iPhones. As people upgrade, millions more can tap into the new technology.

If you’re not already using AI, you probably will be soon — whether you like it or not. 

“We’re getting AI, especially generative AI, shoved down our throats with little to no transparency, and honestly, the opt-out mechanisms are either nonexistent or complicated,” said Sasha Luccioni, AI researcher and climate lead at Hugging Face, a platform for sharing AI and machine learning tools

If that fills you with dread, it’s understandable. Maybe you feel bad participating in the race to build a superintelligent AI nobody asked for. You may feel complicit for using AI models trained on copyrighted material without paying the creators. You probably feel just plain bad about the flood of AI slop that’s ruining the internet even if you did not personally create the slop. 

Then there’s the climate consequences of it all. AI, in its many shapes and forms, requires a lot of energy and water to work. A lot. That might make you feel downright guilty about using AI.

AI’s big energy appetite

There’s a chance Apple Intelligence is more guilt-free than the other big AI options as far as energy is concerned. Apple says it keeps the processing for certain AI features, like GenMoji and Image Playground, entirely on your device. That means less reliance on energy-intensive data centers.

We don’t know exactly how much energy AI uses at these data centers. Using data from a recent Microsoft Research study, Shaolei Ren, an engineering professor at the University of California Riverside, came up with this: Asking ChatGPT to write two 200-word emails uses roughly the same amount of energy as a Tesla Model 3 would need to drive one mile. Because they generate so much heat, the processors that generated those emails would also require about four half-liter bottles of water to cool down.

The consequences of such energy profligacy become clearer if you scale up. The amount of electricity used by data centers, where AI processing largely takes place, is predicted to grow by 160 percent by the end of the decade, and carbon dioxide emissions could more than double as a result, according to Goldman Sachs. Meanwhile, the amount of water needed will also spike, so much so that by 2027, AI’s thirst could be equal to half the annual water withdrawal of the United Kingdom

These are all estimates based on limited data because the tech companies building AI systems, including Apple, Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI, do not share exactly how much energy or water their models use.

“We’re just looking at the black box because we have absolutely no idea of the energy consumption for interacting with the large language models,” Ren explained. He compared the situation to searching for flights on Google and being able to see the carbon emissions for each leg. “But when it comes to these large language models, there’s absolutely none, zero, no information.”

The lack of transparency about AI’s energy demands also runs counter to these tech companies’ sustainability promises. There’s good reason to believe that AI is leading directly to those promises being broken

Due to increases in data center energy usage, Google saw its greenhouse gas emissions increase by 48 percent from 2019 to 2023, despite a pledge to cut emissions by 50 percent from its 2019 levels by 2030. The company no longer claims to be carbon neutral. Microsoft similarly saw a 29 percent jump in emissions from 2020 to 2023. While Microsoft has promised to be carbon negative by 2030, it is now openly struggling with ways to make that happen while keeping pace with AI innovation.

What the AI dealers aren’t telling us

This is what an arms race looks like. It’s worth pointing out here that all energy usages started to spike around the time that OpenAI knocked the world’s socks off with its surprise release of ChatGPT in November 2022. The chatbot became the fastest-growing app ever, capturing a hundred million users in two months and kick-starting the AI gold rush in Silicon Valley. Now, 40 percent of all venture capital money in cloud computing goes to generative AI companies. OpenAI itself announced a $6.6 billion funding round in early October — the largest venture capital round of all time — giving it a $157 billion valuation. 

With such staggering amounts of money at play, it’s perhaps no surprise that energy efficiency takes a back seat to growth and innovation. Companies like OpenAI want the models that power their AI technology to get bigger so they can get better and outperform competitors. And the bigger the model, the greater the energy demand — at least for now. Over time, it’s likely that performance will get more efficient thanks to advances in chip technology, data center cooling, and engineering.

“Because the innovation happened so quickly around when ChatGPT burst onto the scene, you would expect, initially, for the efficiency to be at its lowest point,” Josh Parker, head of sustainability at chipmaker Nvidia, told me.

Still, the most energy-intensive products are now what companies like OpenAI, Google, and Meta are pushing the hardest. Those include real-time chatbots, voice assistants, and search engines. These features enlist larger models and require more advanced chips to work at the same time to reduce latency, or lag. Put simply, they have to do a lot of hard math problems all at once and very quickly. That’s why it takes as much electricity as it does to run a Tesla.

Apple, however, seems to present itself as an exception. As part of its promise to protect user privacy, the company says it handles as many Apple Intelligence tasks as it can on your device without sending queries to data centers. That means when you opt in to Apple Intelligence, you download a small generative AI model that can handle pretty simple tasks on your phone. Your iPhone battery, unlike a grid-connected cloud data center, has a limited amount of power, which forces Apple Intelligence to handle these tasks with some efficiency. Maybe on-device AI is the guilt-free version of the future after all.

The problem, of course, is that we don’t know exactly how Apple Intelligence works. We don’t know which tasks are handled on the device, which are sent to energy-hungry Apple servers, or how much energy it all requires. I asked Apple about this, but the company did not provide specifics. Then again, not providing specifics is a bit of a theme when it comes to big tech companies explaining their AI offerings.

So again, if you’re feeling dread or guilt about AI in your life, that’s understandable. It is very clear that this technology, in its current state, consumes vast and increasing amounts of energy, contributing to greenhouse gas emissions and worsening human-caused climate change. It is also true that you might not have a choice, as big tech companies make generative AI more foundational to their products. You can opt out of Apple Intelligence or never opt in. But you’ll find it’s more difficult, if not impossible, to opt out of AI products from Google, Meta, and Microsoft. (If you want to try, here’s a helpful guide.)

“I don’t think there’s a reason to feel guilty,” said Luccioni. “But I do think there’s a reason — as with climate change in general — to ask for more information, to ask for accountability on behalf of the companies that are selling us this stuff.”

If AI is supposed to solve all our problems or destroy us all or both, it would be nice to know the details. We could ask ChatGPT, but that might be a huge waste of energy.

A version of this story was also published in the Vox Technology newsletter. Sign up here so you don’t miss the next one!


Read full article on: vox.com
Barstool podcasters Brianna Chickenfry and Grace O’Malley address feud rumors after birthday snub
This is the second time in five months that the "Plan Bri Uncut" co-hosts have been forced to shut down rumors of a rift between them.
nypost.com
Carjacking suspect fatally shot by police after pursuit on I-95
Police said troopers spotted the vehicle, which had been carjacked in Maryland, and chased it on the major highway in Virginia.
washingtonpost.com
‘WWHL’: Meredith Marks Says Heather Gay Has Displayed More “Blind Loyalty” To Jen Shah Than Lisa Barlow
"I don’t think her loyalty to Lisa has been blind loyalty."
nypost.com
Helicopter spins out of control at Texas airport, crashes into parked plane: video
A Robinson R44 helicopter was spun out of control and struck a parked small plane while taking off from the Pearland Regional Airport near Houston.
foxnews.com
Halloween 2024 playlist: Ghoulish grooves — from Michael Jackson to Lady Gaga to Billie Eilish
Before Mariah Carey defrosts for Christmas, here are 12 tunes for your pumpkin-pumping pleasure.
nypost.com
Typhoon Kong-rey Hits Taiwan’s East Coast, Leaving At Least One Dead
Taiwan authorities reported one death and 73 injuries from the storm as of Thursday afternoon.
time.com
Joe Rogan says he gave Harris campaign ‘open invitation’ to sit down at anytime: ‘I’ll do it at midnight if she’s up’
The mega-popular podcaster on Wednesday defended his decision to reject the interview based on the ground rules that the Democratic presidential candidate tried to impose — including limiting the time and potentially having Harris' handlers in the room.
nypost.com
House panel rips FTC Chair Lina Khan, says agency has become ‘political tool’ in 2024 election
The powerful House Oversight Committee is calling for Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan, to be replaced, accusing her of infusing "left-wing ideology" into the antitrust agency, flouting due process for companies and doing the EU's bidding to the detriment of US firms.
nypost.com
This turkey, squash and kale soup tastes just like Thanksgiving
When you want the flavors of a Thanksgiving feast without all the work, turn to this veggie-packed, stuffing-topped soup.
washingtonpost.com
What to expect in "swingiest state" of Pennsylvania this election
Joe Biden's narrow win over Donald Trump in Pennsylvania sealed his victory in 2020, but how will the 2024 election compare?
cbsnews.com
Boiling Point: What can we learn from Africa's Likoma Island?
Items crafted at the bustling Katundu workshop in Malawi are a testament not only to the artisanship of the workers and designers, but to an ethic of letting nothing of value go to waste
latimes.com
Jonathan Bennett Says Playing Aaron Samuels Led Him To Producing And Hosting Hallmark’s ‘Finding Mr. Christmas’: “‘Mean Girls’ Started My Career”
Bennett and Finding Mr. Christmas contestants Blake Kelley and Ezra Moreland sat down with DECIDER on none other than Oct. 3!
nypost.com
Ask Sahaj: I rely on my stepdaughter a lot, but she’s mean to me.
Relying on an often-angry stepdaughter for rides to and from doctor’s appointments weighs heavily on this letter writer whose husband recently passed away.
washingtonpost.com
Museum shows can be death for street art. Osgemeos look alive and well.
In a year-long Hirshhorn show squirming with energy, the famous Brazilian twins replace discernment with populist exuberance.
washingtonpost.com
‘Today’ show co-hosts transform into iconic movie characters for Halloween: Austin Powers, Elle Woods and more
The "Today" team paid homage to iconic ‘90s and 2000s movies for Halloween this year.
nypost.com
Independents react negatively to Biden’s ‘garbage’ comments in real time
A recent Fox News focus group test revealed how Independent voters felts about President Biden's recent remarks appearing to call Trump supporters as "garbage."
foxnews.com
Tuberculosis has overtaken COVID as world's deadliest infectious disease
Tuberculosis (TB) is once again the infectious disease responsible for the most deaths worldwide, according to a Tuesday announcement from the World Health Organization. Here's what you need to know.
foxnews.com
The Islanders’ approach with Pierre Engvall can’t go on like this
It is becoming noticeable how little patience Roy seems to have for Engvall’s presence on this hockey team.
nypost.com
Derek Jeter hasn’t seen anything like this Yankees World Series meltdown
This didn't happen in Derek Jeter's era.
nypost.com
Hearing Is Set on Effort to Stop $1M-a-Day Sweepstakes From Elon Musk PAC
A Philadelphia judge plans to hold a hearing Thursday in the city prosecutor’s bid to shut down Elon Musk’s $1 million-a-day sweepstakes.
time.com
Yankees’ World Series gift to teen battling cancer turns ugly fan interference moment into ‘unexpected’ night
“I texted the boys, I knew they were in school, and I was like, ‘Guys, we’re going to the World Series.' I couldn’t believe it.”
nypost.com
Rescue operations still underway after floods in Spain, at least 95 dead
Spain has declared three days of mourning and rescue operations are continuing after meteorologists say a year's worth of rain fell in just eight hours Tuesday and Wednesday, triggering deadly floods. The death toll now stands at 95. BBC News correspondent Nicky Schiller has the latest from Valencia.
cbsnews.com
Late-night hosts ignore, downplay Biden's 'garbage' insult of Trump supporters after panning Puerto Rico joke
President Biden received some cover from his late show supporters Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel, shrugging off his controversial "garbage" comment about Trump supporters.
foxnews.com
Mookie Betts reveals how he really felt about World Series incident with Yankees fans: ‘Wanted to fight’
After winning his third World Series on Wednesday night, Betts finally revealed his true thoughts on the two fans who grabbed him while he he caught a ball in foul territory Tuesday during Game 4.
nypost.com
North Korea tests intercontinental missile, showing potential for attacks on U.S. mainland
North Korea test-fired an intercontinental ballistic missile Thursday that could potentially reach the U.S. mainland. In response, the U.S. and South Korean air forces staged joint aerial drills.
cbsnews.com
‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ at 40: Still the Best of The ‘80s Slashers
Here's why the first Freddy Krueger nightmare still beats any of the Jason, Michael, or Chucky entries from the 1980s.
nypost.com
Asking Eric: Readers respond to older adults seeking connection
Readers write in with ideas for previous letter writers who are looking for connection and community.
washingtonpost.com
These 9 celebrities stand with Trump in the 2024 election
Former President Trump as gained support from numerous celebrities as he campaigns for the White House ahead of the 2024 presidential election.
foxnews.com
Growing calls for illegal migrant to be charged with hate crimes in Jewish man's shooting
Calls are growing for police to charge the illegal migrant accused of shooting a Jewish man to be charged with hate crimes, with one Jewish group slamming the city’s mayor directly.
foxnews.com
‘America’s kindest husband’ now being accused of murdering his wife
A man once dubbed "America's kindest husband" is now suspected of murdering his wife after he was jailed for life for a shocking crime against a teen, according to the slain woman's family.
1 h
nypost.com
Trump rips Biden for "garbage" comment, Harris still trying to appeal to moderates and youth
Former President Donald Trump is seizing on President Biden's comments where he appeared to call Trump supporters "garbage," though the White House says the president was referring specifically to the rhetoric of the comedian who disparaged Puerto Rico during Trump's rally over the weekend. Vice President Kamala Harris is working to distance herself from Biden's remarks as she tries to reach across the aisle for votes. CBS News' Errol Barnett, Aaron Navarro and Olivia Rinaldi have the latest on the 2024 election.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Anna Kendrick tells director 'f--- you' after he embarrassed her in front of 100 extras on set
Anna Kendrick had harsh words for an unnamed director who she said embarrassed her in front of 100 extras on set. The "Woman of the Hour" star said she was mocked after improvising a scene.
1 h
foxnews.com
WATCH: NYC dogs show off Halloween costumes
These three pups from the 34th annual Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade are celebrating Halloween in style.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Menendez brothers ask California Gov. Newsom for clemency
Beverly Hills parental killers Erik and Lyle Menendez are seeking clemency from California Gov. Gavin Newsom, their lawyer said in a recent interview.
1 h
foxnews.com
Jets vs. Texans prediction: ‘Thursday Night Football’ odds, picks, best bet
On Thursday, the Jets will welcome a Texans team that’s won four of its last five games to MetLife Stadium. 
1 h
nypost.com
For Halloween, a beauty pageant: The contestants are bats
Thousands of people have cast their votes to decide which small toothy winged creature is the best looking among the contestants.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Jenna Dewan celebrates ‘funny’ fiancé Steve Kazee’s birthday after he denies mocking Channing Tatum
The actress gushed via Instagram about "growing together, loving harder and laughing louder" in the coming years with the Tony winner.
1 h
nypost.com
RFK indicates Trump 'promised' him 'control' over 'public health agencies'
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. indicated that former President Donald Trump "promised" him "control" over the Department of Agriculture and Department of Health and Human Services.
1 h
foxnews.com
Maniac flier viciously beats sleeping passenger into bloody pulp on United flight
Everett Chad Nelson, 44, split the man’s nose open causing blood to splash all over his seat, the cabin wall, the window and the sleeves of Nelson’s green windbreaker, the complaint claims. The victim was also left with two black eyes.
1 h
nypost.com
5 killed in Israel by Hezbollah airstrike as IDF eliminates terrorist group's special forces commander
A Hezbollah rocket attack in northern Israel on Thursday has left five people dead, officials say, as the IDF continues to target the terrorist group in Lebanon.
1 h
foxnews.com
Kamala Harris’s Narrow Path to Victory
This election will be decided not by another big popular vote but by the slenderest of margins in the Rust Belt battlegrounds.
1 h
theatlantic.com
Suspect in camping trip murder identified after dad found butchered in tent
A suspect has been identified in the murder case of Dustin Kjersem, an avid outdoorsman found dead in his tent nearly three weeks ago.
1 h
foxnews.com
ER patients are still being hurt by racial and gender biases
Patients in pain shouldn't have to advocate for themselves in the emergency room. Stronger laws are need to reduce treatment disparities.
1 h
latimes.com
Lakers newsletter: Bronny James makes a dream come true
Bronny James scores his first NBA points in the arena where he would watch his dad play and dream of scoring in the NBA.
1 h
latimes.com
Kentucky gardeners fight hunger with little free produce libraries
At trade stations in Louisville, Kentucky, gardeners feed the community with excess fruits and vegetables anyone can take.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Every team makes the Maryland football playoffs. Is that a good thing?
Four years after its introduction, the all-inclusive playoff format still divides coaches.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Maryland football emphasized the right to vote. Every player registered.
Coach Michael Locksley has preached to the Terrapins the importance of voting after he made an offseason trip to Selma.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Biden admin faces mounting pressure to dismantle migrant parole program amid 'stress' on small towns
Republicans are demanding a controversial parole program be scrapped as more towns face pressures from an influx of migrants into their communities.
1 h
foxnews.com