Climate change and health: the next challenge of ethical AI.

Journal: The Lancet. Global health
Published Date:

Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) is one of the world's most resource-intensive digital technologies, but the environmental impact of AI on health remains largely unaddressed in both global health and bioethics. Effects on the environment have, thus far, been understood as a subsidiary consideration in AI ethics and rarely considered as a key ethical concern. AI technologies exacerbate climate change and sociopolitical instability due to their intensive use of natural resources and energy resources linked to the training and deployment of algorithmic systems. In global health, this intensive resource use is particularly concerning, given the explicit emphasis on improving health and advancing equity across the world. To address this, we interrogate how the inclusion of AI's environmental impact necessarily reshapes established ethical commitments in AI ethics frameworks and propose concrete strategies for accountability in the area of global health. This approach includes building a culture of intentional AI, for example through improved reporting, auditing, and intranational cooperation, in order to better align AI development and AI ethics with critical climate goals.

Authors

  • Amelia Fiske
    Institute of History and Ethics in Medicine, Department of Preclinical Medicine, TUM School of Medicine and Health, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany. a.fiske@tum.de.
  • Isabella M Radhuber
    Equity and Justice Research Group, Population and Just Societies Program, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenburg, Austria; Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
  • Theresa Willem
    Institute of History and Ethics in Medicine, Department of Preclinical Medicine, TUM School of Medicine and Health, Technical University of Munich, Ismaninger Straße 22, 81675, Munich, Germany. theresa.willem@tum.de.
  • Alena Buyx
    Institute for History and Ethics of Medicine, Technical University of Munich School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
  • Leo Anthony Celi
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA.
  • Stuart McLennan
    Technical University of Munich.