Measuring the Carbon Intensity of AI in Cloud Instances
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The advent of cloud computing has provided people around the world with unprecedented access to computational power and enabled rapid growth in technologies such as machine learning, the computational demands of which incur a high energy cost and a commensurate carbon footprint. As a result, recent scholarship has called for better estimates of the greenhouse gas impact of AI: data scientists today do not have easy or reliable access to measurements of this information, which precludes develo...
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| Registry ID | 00df5cf0d83c48657d453ab8083d8805a67f744f |
| License | ArXiv |
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@misc{00df5cf0d83c48657d453ab8083d8805a67f744f,
author = {Unknown},
title = {Measuring the Carbon Intensity of AI in Cloud Instances Paper},
year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://api.semanticscholar.org/00df5cf0d83c48657d453ab8083d8805a67f744f}},
note = {Accessed via Free2AITools Knowledge Fortress}
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@article{Unknown2026Measuring,
title={Measuring the Carbon Intensity of AI in Cloud Instances},
author={},
note={Indexed by Free2AITools},
year={2026}
} Abstract & Analysis
The advent of cloud computing has provided people around the world with unprecedented access to computational power and enabled rapid growth in technologies such as machine learning, the computational demands of which incur a high energy cost and a commensurate carbon footprint. As a result, recent scholarship has called for better estimates of the greenhouse gas impact of AI: data scientists today do not have easy or reliable access to measurements of this information, which precludes development of actionable tactics. We argue that cloud providers presenting information about software carbon intensity to users is a fundamental stepping stone towards minimizing emissions. In this paper, we provide a framework for measuring software carbon intensity, and propose to measure operational carbon emissions by using location-based and time-specific marginal emissions data per energy unit. We provide measurements of operational software carbon intensity for a set of modern models covering natural language processing and computer vision applications, and a wide range of model sizes, including pretraining of a 6.1 billion parameter language model. We then evaluate a suite of approaches for reducing emissions on the Microsoft Azure cloud compute platform: using cloud instances in different geographic regions, using cloud instances at different times of day, and dynamically pausing cloud instances when the marginal carbon intensity is above a certain threshold. We confirm previous results that the geographic region of the data center plays a significant role in the carbon intensity for a given cloud instance, and find that choosing an appropriate region can have the largest operational emissions reduction impact. We also present new results showing that the time of day has meaningful impact on operational software carbon intensity.Finally, we conclude with recommendations for how machine learning practitioners can use software carbon intensity information to reduce environmental impact.
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