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Governments should recognize electoral processes as critical infrastructure and enact laws to regulate the use of generative Artificial Intelligence. Various state actors will attempt to interfere with voting operations by supporting candidates whose policies align with the interests of their governments.
Policies driving development At 2023’s United Nation’s Climate Change Conference (COP28), governments set a goal to triple global renewables power capacity by 2030. To develop renewable energy technology, governments are turning to various public policy measures.
“AI is an unbelievable opportunity to address some of the world’s most pressing challenges in health care, manufacturing, climate change and more,” said Christina Shim, IBM’s global head of Sustainability Software and an AI Ethics Board member. In our 2023 Impact Report , we reported that 70.6%
Businesses, governments and individuals now see sustainability as a global imperative. As more companies set broad environmental, social and governance (ESG) goals, finding a way to track and accurately document progress is increasingly important. trillion in economic benefits by 2030.
trillion to the global economy in 2030, more than the current output of China and India combined.” ” When observing its potential impact within industry, McKinsey Global Institute estimates that in just the manufacturing sector, emerging technologies that use AI will by 2025 add as much as USD 3.7 trillion in value. .”
More than 110 countries at the United Nations’ COP28 climate change conference agreed to triple that capacity by 2030, and global investment in clean energy transition hit a record high of USD 1.8 In fact, world-wide capacity for energy from solar, wind and other renewable sources increased by 50% in 2023. trillion in 2023.
partners with Google to use their data for solar generation and cost saving simulations, and with German battery manufacturer SOLARWATT for energy storage. The emergence of local energy communities—from local governments to neighborhoods—is driven by the idea of owning and managing the generation, distribution and consumption of energy.
The number of IoT connected devices are growing in practically every industry, and is even predicted to reach 29 billion worldwide by 2030. It is also valuable externally: to fuel companies, vehicle manufacturers, retailers and other brands wanting to engage in connected driving experiences for the fleet.
By 2030, according to IoT Analytics , we will be relying on some 41 billion IoT devices worldwide, up from 17 billion at the close of 2023. It requires technical innovation to mesh with supporting security standards and emerging government regulations much quicker and smoother than has ever happened in the Internet era.
Not coincidentally, industry standards groups and government regulators have stepped forward to embrace a vital supporting role. Statista estimates there will be north of 30 billion connected devices by 2030, embedded in systems as varied as pacemakers, wind turbines and smart refrigerators. The industry has to work together, he says.
This may include things like manufacturing location, date and time, product materials and composition, labels and certifications, environmental impact, instruction and maintenance manuals, service history, and so on. The rollout of EU mandates is happening gradually between 2026 and 2030.
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