Stephen Minas

Chair, Advisory Board - United Nations Climate Technology Centre and Network

About the Speaker

Stephen Minas is professor of law at Peking University School of Transnational Law. His research is focused on international, European Union and commercial law related to the clean-energy transition and climate change. He takes a special interest in finance and technology and is an expert in dispute resolution.
He has served as a negotiator and a co-facilitator in United Nations climate negotiations and is a member of the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s commission on environmental law. He is vice-chair of the UN Climate Technology Centre and Network’s advisory board.

Matchmaking Information

Company Name

United Nations Climate Technology Centre and Network

Job Title

Chair, Advisory Board - United Nations Climate Technology Centre and Network

Country

Hong Kong

About Me

Stephen Minas is professor of law at Peking University School of Transnational Law. His research is focused on international, European Union and commercial law related to the clean-energy transition and climate change. He takes a special interest in finance and technology and is an expert in dispute resolution. He has served as a negotiator and a co-facilitator in United Nations climate negotiations and is a member of the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s commission on environmental law. He is vice-chair of the UN Climate Technology Centre and Network’s advisory board.

Attending

AI and climate change: can machines alone do the job?
ISRTC

AI and climate change: can machines alone do the job?

Tuesday, May 13, 2025
9:30 AM - 10:05 AM | Asia/Muscat

Speaker's Sessions (1)

Session
ISRTC
AI and climate change: can machines alone do the job?
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
9:30 AM - 10:05 AM | Asia/Muscat
Panel
English

AI and climate change: can machines alone do the job?

Many tech firms and global companies believe that artificial intelligence (AI) could reduce greenhouse-gas emissions. A recent report by the Boston Consulting Group finds that the technology could mitigate as much as 10% of global emissions. But such optimistic projections are tempered by other concerns including its high energy consumption could undermine its environmental benefits. Training a single large AI model consumes as much energy as 126 homes in a year. Additionally, AI’s water consumption is becoming a concern as 10 to 50 searches can use as much water as a 500ml bottle, with global search volumes pointing to worrying impacts on water resources. While AI offers transformative potential, how can its benefits be harnessed without exacerbating environmental damage?
Speakers (3)
Giovanni Everduin
Chief Strategy & Innovation Officer - Commercial Bank International
Stephen Minas
Chair, Advisory Board - United Nations Climate Technology Centre and Network
Moderator (1)
Robert Willock
global editorial director - Economist Intelligence Corporate Network