China’s new AI carbon model lowers its 2022 emissions by 17.7%

The Shanghai Advanced Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has developed an AI model that calculates China’s 2022 greenhouse gas emissions as 17.7% lower than a widely used United Nations equivalent, while raising the US total by 15.2%. The system factors in both production and consumption, lessening the responsibility of exporters such as China.

The Shanghai Advanced Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) developed the ScienceOne-Yuheng Carbon Accounting Large Model, which recalculates 2022 greenhouse gas emissions. It shows China’s figure 17.7% lower than a widely used United Nations equivalent, while raising the United States total by 15.2%.

CAS stated on April 8: “Panoramic carbon accounting is set to become a core driver for advancing global climate governance towards greater precision and consensus.” The model would contribute to “a more equitable and scientifically grounded global carbon accounting and responsibility-sharing framework,” CAS added.

Wei Wei, vice-president of the institute and lead scientist on the team, said the model “represents a paradigm shift in how we understand and manage global carbon emissions.”

By factoring in both production and consumption emissions, the approach aims to provide a fuller assessment of carbon responsibility for exporters like China.

Artigos relacionados

Climate scientists analyzing implausible high-emissions scenarios on digital screens in a lab setting.
Imagem gerada por IA

Climate-scenario designers move away from RCP8.5 in next-generation modeling framework

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA Verificado

A new scenario framework for CMIP7—the standardized set of emissions pathways used by many climate modelers and referenced in IPCC assessments—concludes that CMIP6’s highest-emissions pathway, SSP5-8.5 (and its earlier counterpart, RCP8.5), has become “implausible” given recent energy-cost trends, climate policy developments and emissions patterns.

Chinese authorities have issued new emission rules targeting strategic sectors including AI data centres to meet 2030 climate goals. The move comes amid the Iran war heightening energy security needs. The rules also call for greener digital infrastructure.

Reportado por IA

A US Congressional commission concludes that China’s open ecosystem has narrowed performance gaps with top Western large language models. The report highlights the compounding force of open-source models and manufacturing dominance.

Alibaba chairman Joe Tsai has credited China’s advantages in artificial intelligence to investments in its power grid and open-source models. He stated that such massive investments have provided ample supply and low costs for the energy-intensive AI sector. China’s industrial depth highlights vast potential for AI applications, Tsai said.

Reportado por IA

A district in Guangzhou has launched a platform to connect businesses with artificial intelligence providers. Initial projects are valued at more than 13 million yuan. Officials say the move aims to accelerate the commercial use of AI.

quinta-feira, 04 de junho de 2026, 14:46h

US firms test DeepSeek as AI costs climb

quarta-feira, 27 de maio de 2026, 20:18h

China releases auto industry blueprint to set EV and AI standards

quarta-feira, 13 de maio de 2026, 06:06h

China institutions lead global AI conference contributions

quarta-feira, 22 de abril de 2026, 18:20h

Gas-powered data centers could surpass Morocco's emissions

quarta-feira, 22 de abril de 2026, 15:37h

China launches trillion-dollar services and manufacturing fusion plan

quarta-feira, 15 de abril de 2026, 22:22h

China doubles ‘AI for science’ computing scale in two months using no US chips

terça-feira, 31 de março de 2026, 17:36h

China plans AI-powered smart shipping system by 2027

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar