Amazon.com Inc plans to pilot a new carbon-removal material for data centers, which are at risk of worsening emissions from artificial intelligence systems they power, a startup behind the deal said on Monday.
A recent study presents a radiative transfer model-driven machine learning technique for retrieving carbon monoxide from the world's first hyperspectral Geostationary Interferometric Infrared Sounder (GIIRS) onboard Fengyun-4B (FY-4B) satellite,
Amazon Web Services (NASDAQ:AMZN) has partnered with startup Orbital Materials to utilize its artificial intelligence platform to develop advanced materials capable of reducing the carbon footprint of data centers.
Amazon’s data centers could soon double as carbon capture machines, offsetting the harmful effects of the massive amounts of energy required to run them.
There's no AI revolution without an energy revolution, according to leaders in the AI industry.
Planet Labs PBC (NYSE: PL), a leading provider of daily data and insights about Earth, today announced that they have signed a multi-year, seven-figure deal with Laconic, a company leading a global shift in climate finance,
AWS has formed a partnership with Orbital Materials which uses AI to design materials to help reduce emissions at data centers.
Microsoft is working to advance the sustainability of the datacenter infrastructure that delivers cloud and AI innovations. Learn more.
Using Amazon SageMaker JumpStart and the AWS Marketplace, Orbital will also provide its open-source AI model for modeling sophisticated materials. "Together, we have the opportunity to set new benchmarks for carbon removal and efficiency across the industry," said Howard Gefen, General Manager of AWS Energy & Utilities.
is reshaping the Voluntary Carbon Market (VCM) with its use of artificial intelligence (AI). By integrating AI-powered insights with advanced carbon assurance and management, Greenomix is moving beyond traditional carbon credit markets and pioneering a new ...
Amazon Web Services unveiled redesigns of many components in its data centers meant to increase performance and efficiency amid an AI-driven power surge.
As data centres and artificial intelligence drives electricity demand across the US, permitting wait times for transmission lines will need to be dramatically sped up in a number of ways, panellists said Monday,