Tech giants struggle to justify huge AI costs | The World | ABC NEWS
ABC News (Australia)
0:00 Well, last week Open AI announced it
0:02 was scrapping its video generation app Sora.
0:05 Industry experts say Sora is not able to enjoy sufficient financial returns
0:09 for the vast and expensive amounts
0:11 of computing required to create images and videos.
0:15 And as the war in the Middle East rages
0:17 on, the rising cost of energy is having a huge
0:19 impact on the cost of running the massive data
0:22 centers required for a range of services including artificial intelligence.
0:27 Let's get more on this with Toby Walsh.
0:29 He's the chief scientist at the AI
0:31 Institute at the University of New South Wales.
0:34 Uh Toby, good to have you with us this evening.
0:37 So, um Open AI killed its video platform uh this month
0:40 and despite a licensing deal with Disney and then huge investment.
0:44 So, is AI video you know struggling to make enough money to justify its costs?
0:51 Uh it wasn't.
0:53 They were spending perhaps $15 million or losing $15 million
0:56 a day running the service because people weren't paying enough subscriptions.
1:00 So, Open AI is focusing much more on corporates who can pay more than consumers.
1:05 But it also reflects the fact of course energy costs impacting us all,
1:09 impacting the people running data centers.
1:11 60% of the cost of running a data center is paying for the electricity.
1:15 They're generating they're using lots of energy
1:17 to to run those data centers and the cost
1:19 of energy is going up for them as just as it is for us.
1:22 Yes.
1:22 So, why don't we see other companies follow suit if they're not
1:25 finding sort of these positive benefits from the costs in the long run?
1:30 Well, I mean a lot of what we have, a lot of the AI we have today has been
1:33 offered uh free or at least at much reduced cost, not not the actual cost.
1:38 So, I think you can see a lot of belt tightening happening
1:41 where uh things that we had that were cheap or for free,
1:44 uh we might have to start paying for.
1:46 Yes.
1:47 So, do you know generative AI uh models that so many people are using?
1:51 You see it in your social media feeds
1:53 every few seconds um to generate text and images
1:56 and videos consume significantly more energy than than sort
2:00 of traditional computing methods to to produce these images.
2:04 Uh they certainly do.
2:05 Um just generating a ask ask answering a chat GPT query
2:09 uses 10 to 100 times the energy that asking a Google search.
2:13 And then generating video is again orders of magnitude more.
2:17 Um that's why they were charging $4 for a 5-second clip uh video clip.
2:22 It's uh using lots and lots of energy to make those uh those funny memes.
2:27 It's not clear that those funny memes are worth that amount of money.
2:30 Yeah, so with this, you know, might this force big changes uh by tech companies,
2:36 you know, who who offer consumers almost you know,
2:38 these unlimited possibilities in creating images and videos?
2:42 Would would they have to sort of like formulate, you know,
2:45 um I suppose a subscription service that is uh
2:48 more blanket than what it is currently at the moment?
2:51 Yeah, I think we're going to have to face up
2:53 to the fact that we might start having to pay a bit more
2:55 for AI services that they lured us in as usual by by offering
2:59 them free to begin with, but then as the market settles down,
3:03 we're going to have to start paying uh more
3:05 for those services because it is costing them money.
3:07 And they have to somehow get that money back.
3:09 Yes, and and you mentioned earlier, you know,
3:10 that uh uh these data centers, you know, how much energy that they're using.
3:16 Um are tech companies, you know,
3:17 transparent about that at a time when the world is uh you know,
3:21 feeling the pinch uh from these high energy costs,
3:24 not least because of the war in the Middle East?
3:27 Yeah, we it would be good if there was a bit
3:29 more transparency as to uh what the energy were being used.
3:32 I mean, it all fits in the bigger picture of the the energy transition
3:36 that that we're increasingly electrifying our lives.
3:40 They're using a lot of renewable energies to run data centers.
3:43 Um but equally, maybe that's taking renewables away from where we
3:47 need them to to run our homes and offices and factories.
3:50 Yeah, so what might be the impact of these costs to the industry
3:53 itself and all the industries that do depend on these data centers,
3:58 you know, in in in the medium to longer-term future?
4:01 Well, we've seen remarkable scale of investment,
4:04 billions of dollars being put into data centers
4:06 in the expectation that they were going to make a profit.
4:09 I suspect we might see a bit
4:10 of a cooling in that market realizing that it's going
4:13 to be much harder to to make returns
4:15 if energy costs are going to be more greater,
4:18 if the economy is also going to be slowed
4:19 down by the by the energy crisis and everything else.
4:22 So, I think it's going to the the AI
4:24 boom that we're seeing might be starting to deflate
4:27 a little bit that it won't be rolling out
4:29 as quickly or as as vigorously as we expected.
4:32 Yeah, so is the war in the Middle
4:33 East you believe hastening this this deflation?
4:38 It is and I mean the other thing that's really
4:40 important to work out is not just the energy cost,
4:42 it's also the fact that several data three data centers have been attacked.
4:46 But they're a vital part of the infrastructure and they're now
4:49 being used for the very first time as targets of war.
4:52 So, again, that's putting a chill on people's expectations.
4:56 The the Gulf was hoping to be a major AI data center, a major AI center.
5:01 That's certainly people are reassessing whether
5:04 that's going to be the case because
5:05 the the world is a much more uncertain place than it was six months ago.
5:09 Yeah, I do wonder, you know, there's so much investments that are going
5:12 into these data centers and and I'm wondering,
5:14 you know, what sort of investment in general do they
5:17 have in sort of using renewables to be able to power,
5:21 you know, their their functions there because
5:24 you see so many of them in Australia,
5:26 but many popping up across the Middle East as well.
5:30 Well, many of the tech companies have made
5:32 very good promises about about their their climate credentials,
5:36 about using renewable energies,
5:38 also about the water that's used to cool those data centers.
5:41 But the problem is that they've been expanding at such a rate
5:43 it's not clear that they've been keeping up to those promises.
5:46 We need to really make sure that they do not actually add
5:50 to our carbon footprint by by spending ever more on these data centers.
5:53 So but again, to go back to your question at the start of this report,
5:57 it'd be great to see a bit more
5:58 transparency from them to understand exactly what's going on.
6:02 And Toby, just one more question.
6:03 I mean, one one of the commodities that's threatened
6:06 by the war in the Middle East is helium.
6:08 That's used to make chips for smartphones to be used for AI.
6:12 Why is helium firstly such a critical element here and and how
6:16 vulnerable are all these data center projects in order to possible shortages?
6:23 Well, chip shortages will have a huge great knock-on effect.
6:26 Helium is used in the manufacturing of lithography of them.
6:29 Helium is a byproduct that they get from making natural gas.
6:32 As big significant percentage of the world's helium is extracted in the Gulf.
6:37 And we're discovering that it's not just oil that's going to be impacted
6:40 by by the the Gulf the bottlenecks that are sitting in the Gulf.
6:46 It's many other commodities, helium being one of them, fertilizer being another.
6:50 We're discovering how connected the world is and how
6:53 critical some of those things are going to be
6:55 and that that would be another significant stop on the AI
6:58 boom is if we couldn't have the AI chips anymore.
7:02 Okay, Toby Walsh, really a good to get
7:04 your insights and your thoughts on the program today.
7:06 Thank you so much.
7:08 My pleasure.