Panel Discussion
Towards Environmentally Sustainable AI
Deep Jariwala, Associate Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering at Penn & Benjamin Lee, Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering and Professor of Computer and Information Science at Penn
Towards Environmentally Sustainable AI
Deep Jariwala, Associate Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering at Penn & Benjamin Lee, Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering and Professor of Computer and Information Science at Penn
Kleinman Center Energy Forum
220 S. 34th Street
Fisher Fine Arts Library, 4th floor
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
USA
This workshop will explore the environmental impact of the super-linear growth trends for artificial intelligence from a holistic perspective, spanning data, software and hardware. Professor Jariwala and Professor Lee will present on the carbon footprint of AI computing by examining the model development cycle across industry-scale machine learning use cases and, at the same time, considering the life cycle of system hardware and global resources available for hardware production. Taking a step further, they will capture the operational and manufacturing carbon footprint of AI computing and present an end-to-end analysis for what and how hardware-software design and at-scale optimization can help reduce the overall carbon footprint of AI.
Based on lessons learned from past and recent research developments at Penn in memory technology, Professor Jariwala and Professor Lee will share the key challenges and chart out important development directions across the many dimensions of AI at both hardware and software levels. They will also discuss what aspects of society and environment the super-linear growth in AI is expected to impact as a result. They hope the talk and discussion can inspire the community to advance the field of AI in an environmentally responsible manner.
The AI and Climate Change workshop series is organized by the Penn Program on Regulation and is made possible in part by funding from the Environmental Innovations Initiative. We also thank the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy, Center for Technology, Innovation & Competition, Warren Center for Network and Data Sciences, and Wharton Climate Center for their co-sponsorship of the series.
Snacks and other refreshments will be served.
The workshop is free of charge, open to the public, and will be held in person.