UN Chief Urges AI Firms to Reveal Environmental Impact

United Nations University

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – June 23, 2026 — United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres on Tuesday announced the launch of the AI Environmental Transparency Initiative during an address at London Climate Action Week, calling on major artificial intelligence companies in the private sector to publicly disclose the full environmental impacts of their systems and commit to powering all data centres with renewable energy by 2030.

The initiative comes amid growing concerns over the rapidly expanding environmental footprint of AI infrastructure, including its demand for electricity, freshwater resources and land.

The announcement was inspired by recommendations from UNU-INWEH's report this month, Environmental Cost of AI: Energy Use, Carbon, Water and Land Footprints , which documented the hidden resource demands associated with AI infrastructure and called for greater transparency and accountability across the sector.

Guterres said that AI companies should also commit to powering their facilities with electricity produced with renewable technologies, such as wind and solar, by 2030.

"No more hidden costs," Guterres said. "If AI is to help build a better future, it must be honest about what it costs us now."

Professor Kaveh Madani , Director of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH), described the Secretary-General's initiative as "a gift" and "an opportunity to be proactive instead of reactive."

Madani, who led the recent UN University investigation , said the initiative offers the AI industry an opportunity to address growing public concerns about its environmental impacts.

"We cannot properly manage what we do not measure," said Madani. "The industry now has a golden chance to change some of the wrong perceptions that have been shaped by disinformation campaigns against AI to ensure that AI is an enabler of sustainability transition and not its enemy."

The initiative follows growing evidence that AI's environmental impacts extend beyond its digital interface and into physical infrastructure and resource consumption, with costs and benefits that are often unfairly distributed across communities and generations.

The AI Environmental Transparency Initiative seeks to establish transparency and accountability as foundational principles for responsible AI development. By making environmental impacts publicly available and comparable across companies, the initiative aims to support informed policymaking while encouraging a transition toward sustainable and renewable-powered AI infrastructure.

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Aczel, M., Chamanara, S., Matin, M., Farsi, A., Marwala, T., Madani, K. (2026). Environmental Cost of AI's Energy Use: Carbon, Water and Land Footprints. United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH), Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada. doi: 10.53328/INR26RMA002

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