Thursday, 9 July 2026

Datacentres are a ticking time bomb. We must make sure AI’s benefits outweigh the costs.

Extract from The Guardian 

 A datacentre being expanded in Brisbane


They suck up energy and water, and blast out heat. Just who is better off from all this investment – aside from tech bros?

The two great existential threats of our time – the climate crisis and AI – come hurtling together in the explosion of datacentres across Australia and around the world.

You can hardly avoid hearing about them these days, either with awed reverence of the promised benefits to humankind or with fear and anger given the implications for the climate, inflation, jobs and even housing affordability.

And that’s before we get to the implications of artificial intelligence itself – to me, both inspiring and terrifying – which is the primary driver of the datacentre boom.

Worldwide, there are more than 10,000 active datacentres, with this number expected to increase by 3.5 times at an estimated cost of US$7tn. For perspective, that’s a little over 5% of the entire world’s annual GDP – we are talking big bickies. The US hosts most of these centres but Australia is attracting activity, with 286 active or planned centres and global AI leaders including Anthropic looking to Australia as a potential training ground for its models.

The economic, environmental and social consequences of this datacentre investment boom are profound. Yet governments here and around the world are, by and large, taking a laissez-faire approach – perhaps from Fomo on the alleged benefits or from fear of upsetting the billionaire tech bros, or both.

Governments and proponents of datacentres often refer to them as “infrastructure”, which certainly sounds like something we need. But they are neither so-called “hard” infrastructure (think roads, telecommunications or power and water) nor “soft” infrastructure (healthcare or education). Unlike roads or education, it is unclear who is benefiting from all this investment (aside from the tech bros) or how. If we are going to call datacentres infrastructure, they should have to face examination as to whether their benefits outweigh the costs, just as any other projects would.

There’s no doubt that AI can benefit humankind – and I don’t mean getting help designing your travel itinerary or anti-tax meme. In Shanghai, it’s relieving congestion; around the world it’s improving diagnosis accuracy and speed for X-ray, CT, MRI and other imaging; and it is helping optimise energy grids to avoid blackouts. The potential economic and social benefits are enormous. But we cannot look at these benefits without assessing the costs.

And those potential costs are large. The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority has written to banks to warn of the accelerating cybersecurity risk posed by AI. Its recommendation, without any irony, is to use AI tools to help prevent the AI threat.

It is by now fairly well-known that datacentres use huge amounts of energy and water. Datacentres in Australia are expected to triple our consumption of both by 2030. At a time when our best answer to the climate crisis is to electrify as fast as possible using renewable energy and storage, allowing these energy vampires to strain grids could slow the transition to net zero emissions – and add to energy costs for everyday consumers.

While fossil fuels still power about half our energy demand, we will be adding huge amounts of polluting greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. Alarmingly, Queensland says it’s happy to keep using fossil fuels for datacentres, resisting the federal government’s “expectations”. Any cost-benefit analysis must include the collective impact of datacentre emissions.

Waste heat from datacentres is also a significant problem: intense energy going in turns into heat. While this might be useful in cold climates such as Finland, where the waste heat is used to heat homes, in most parts Australia we are already facing more days of extreme heat as the planet warms.

Of the potential to boost economic growth and employment, while the datacentre boom has lifted business investment off the floor over the last year, most of the equipment must be imported. This means that the direct effect of the investment on the size of our economic pie is close to zero. Beyond the construction phase, datacentres do not create many jobs – far less than other sectors such as manufacturing.

When Australian politicians or industry proponents talk about the benefits of datacentres, they are really talking about the possible benefits of the AI that they enable, and especially the productivity gains AI is expected to drive, whatever the size and timing of these might be. In a speech to the Australian Business Economists in February, the assistant minister for science, technology and the digital economy, Andrew Charlton, noted that Australia was now at a crossroad. From here, we could continue to be a “technology taker”, with some productivity benefits, or we could become “a world-class adopter and creator and exporter of AI technology”. Australia’s poor past record on commercialising our ideas and keeping the profits at home suggests the better option will also be much harder.

Charlton also said the government should ensure “that technology works for the Australian people, and not the other way around”. Looking at the datacentre and AI landscape and their associated costs, it has not succeeded.

Nicki Hutley is a consulting economist

Women and university graduates in Australia most at risk of losing jobs to AI, report finds.

 

Extract from The Guardian

Those with high levels of vocational training, including tradespeople, are least exposed to AI displacement, according to government review.

According to a first-of-its-kind national report, people in the more exposed occupations are more likely to be women and have university qualifications.

They include clerks, retail managers, software programmers, accountants, receptionists and advertising and marketing professionals, according to data from Jobs and Skills Australia (JSA) contained in the AI and Employment in Australia report.

Jobs deemed as the “least exposed” to AI displacement are filled by those with the lowest level of university qualifications and the highest level of vocational training, including tradespeople and aged care workers.

Next week, the Albanese government is expected to reveal updated plans on how to regulate and manage AI in a wide range of areas, including industry, the economy and safety guardrails.

“Artificial intelligence could yet reshape the jobs market in Australia, but this report shows labour market conditions remain strong by historical standards, youth outcomes have mostly held up, and occupational reshuffling has not accelerated,” said the employment minister, Amanda Rishworth.

“[The] government is determined to ensure AI is harnessed to create good jobs, not threaten them. We will continue to make sure Australians are supported through this change, with the skills, training and pathways needed to adapt and benefit.”

The report is the first time the government has tracked this data and it will continue to monitor and report trends regularly.

“We find a small negative relationship between AI exposure and employment growth,” it said.

The government is under pressure to outline its responses to AI-related concerns in a number of areas, including copyright and protection of media and creatives, privacy, health, industry, trust and safety, and workplace relations. There are also questions of how to assure Australians of the need to devote swathes of land, power and water to resource-intensive datacentres.

Andrew Charlton, the assistant minister for technology, conceded in a speech on Tuesday that public trust in AI is low, and that the government needed to better regulate the space.

The government has ruled out watering down copyright protections for AI, after reports emerged that leading companies have raised the need to access Australian data before they would make major investments into the country.

Anthony Albanese is expected to make a major speech next week to provide an overview of the government’s plans on AI. Multiple government sources said the update was likely to include how Labor plans to respond to various challenges created by the new technology, but is unlikely to include specific responses to copyright questions.

On Wednesday, asked about potential copyright changes, the prime minister said journalists “should be paid for your work if someone is using that to gain profit”.

“My government has a strong record of supporting people; one, having control over things that they have created, and secondly, if things are being used, being paid for it, being properly compensated for it.”

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

Outback becomes oasis of birds, wildlife after 'unbelievable' desert rains.

 Extract from ABC News

By Crispian Yeomans

A tiny golden bird nestled among dry grass in what looks to be fairly dry country.

A cisticola has been photographed hundreds of kilometres from its coastal home. (Supplied: Bush Heritage / Cameron Whiley)

In short:

An "unbelievable" rain season has attracted birds rarely seen in the Channel Country.

Hundreds of thousands of birds have flocked inland to often-dry wetlands in Queensland and South Australia.

What's next?

Ecologists are monitoring the wide range of species.

Tuesday, 7 July 2026

A 'game of cat and mouse' in Gaza as Israel's Yellow Line moves further into territory.

Extract from ABC News 

Three photos of large concrete blocks painted yellow with signs, seen in front

The IDF uses these blocks to mark the "Yellow Line" between Israeli- and Hamas-controlled territory. (ABC News)

In short:

The so-called Yellow Line in Gaza that marks the boundary of Israeli-controlled territory has been moved further into the enclave.

Israel now controls 60 per cent of Gaza, its military has confirmed, up from the 53 per cent agreed to in last year's ceasefire negotiations.

Concrete blocks used to mark the boundary are often moved without notice, according to residents; however, the IDF says it takes "significant efforts" to warn civilians of its movements.