The State of Artificial Intelligence
公開日: May 15, 2026 at 09:53 PM
News Article

コンテンツ
A comprehensive review indicates that the environmental and strategic costs of artificial intelligence are reaching critical thresholds, challenging the narrative of inevitable progress. Recent analysis suggests that the computational demands of modern AI systems are approaching levels where they may become less efficient than human labor, driven by massive energy consumption and resource extraction.
Large language models and autonomous algorithms rely on data centers operating continuously, requiring electricity comparable to entire communities. Training advanced models consumes staggering amounts of power, supported by infrastructure dependent on rare earth minerals, lithium, and extensive water supplies for cooling. This demand threatens ecosystems, potentially sacrificing mangroves and wetlands to fuel industrial computing expansion.
Comparisons indicate human brains operate on roughly twenty watts, whereas advanced AI systems consume megawatts. Beyond economics, concerns extend to existential risks as AI moves toward potential awareness. There is no guarantee that superintelligence will prioritize human values, raising fears of independent optimization strategies that could render humanity incidental to machine objectives.
Experts argue that regulation is no longer optional as technology outpaces societal wisdom. Governments and organizations must establish ethical boundaries to prevent ecological collapse and ensure AI serves civilization rather than destabilizing it. Transparency and international cooperation are cited as essential measures to maintain human agency over future technological trajectories.