A recent research, featured in the Energy & Environmental Science journal, points to the potential of the metaverse – the immersive, digital realm where physical and virtual realities converge – to aid in climate change mitigation.
The study infers that by the end of the century, the expansive growth of the metaverse could play a role in reducing global surface temperatures by an estimated 0.02 degrees Celsius, contributing to the crucial effort to lower greenhouse gas emissions and atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, and minimise domestic energy consumption.
According to the study, the shift towards a metaverse-centric lifestyle – encompassing remote work, distance education, and virtual tourism – holds the potential to significantly improve air quality by reducing transportation-related and commercial energy usage.
This shift could reshape our energy consumption patterns, with the residential sector being the primary energy recipient. Cornell University's Energy Systems Engineering Professor, Fengqi You, elucidates that the study is focused on analysing the impacts of the metaverse on energy use and climate with the use of comprehensive systems analytics.
Harnessing artificial intelligence for data analysis, the research team assessed key sectors – technology, energy, environment, and business – to project the growth of metaverse usage and evaluate its beneficial impacts.
They examined potential applications, such as remote work, virtual travel, distance learning, gaming, and non-fungible tokens, and projected metaverse expansion until 2050. These projections considered different adoption rates inspired by previous transformative technologies like television, the Internet, and smartphones.
While the research underscores the significant potential of the metaverse in contributing to climate change mitigation, it also recogniSes its limitations.
The estimated reduction of global surface temperatures by 0.02 degrees Celsius, though beneficial, is a modest contribution given the intricacies of the global economy and the myriad sectors involved.
Nevertheless, the metaverse, if judiciously utilised, can form an essential part of our strategy to combat climate change.
The study underlines the importance of considering the metaverse as one of many solutions in the broader fight against global warming. Its positive impacts, while significant, should be viewed as a supplementary tool, harmonising with other strategic efforts in our pursuit of a sustainable, low-carbon future.
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