Global Partnership Unleashes AI to Combat Climate Change, Disasters

At a recent event during London Climate Action Week, Google and its partners unveiled powerful new applications of AI aimed at boosting climate resilience, cutting global warming, and enhancing urban infrastructure.

The core message from the “Google AI for the Planet” event was clear: collaboration between technology, academia, and industry is “absolutely essential” to tackle challenges of this magnitude, according to Kate Brandt, Google’s Chief Sustainability Officer.

The event showcased multiple global systems that are leveraging AI to shift from simple emergency response to sophisticated, intelligent anticipation of climate threats:

  • Wildfire Detection: The new FireSat project combines satellite data and AI to detect wildfires as small as 5-by-5 meters globally, with updates every 20 minutes. This level of near-real-time, high-resolution data is expected to revolutionize disaster response.
  • Averting Contrail Warming: AI is now being used to create forecasts that guide pilots around regions where persistent aircraft contrails—which act as a “thermal blanket” and account for an estimated 2% of human-caused warming—are likely to form. By adjusting just 5% of flights, up to 80% of contrail-related warming could be avoided.
  • Flood Prediction: Google’s Flood Hub, based on a global hydrological AI model, accurately predicts extreme river floods up to seven days in advance, covering more than 100 countries and 700 million people.

AI for Smarter Cities and Grids

The event also highlighted how AI is being used on the ground to make infrastructure more resilient and efficient:

  • Intelligent Roadway Management: Bentley Systems, an infrastructure engineering software company, demonstrated a partnership with Google Street View. Their mobility analytics group, Blyncsy, uses AI to analyze imagery at scale, detecting over 40 roadway features—from potholes and worn crosswalks to guardrail damage. This allows crews to be sent to the “exactly the right place with exactly the right amount of material,” according to Bentley’s Chief Sustainability Officer, Chris Bradshaw.
  • Disaster Recovery: In disaster scenarios, this AI-powered platform provides rapid before-and-after assessments. The technology has been deployed in California to identify scorched road assets and malfunctioning streetlights following wildfires.
  • Optimizing the Energy Grid: Power company Engie is using AI to manage its assets, such as analyzing sensor data and maintenance records across over 150 hydroelectric plants in Brazil to detect daily anomalies, resulting in a 2% increase in production efficiency.

Ultimately, the goal is to use AI to amplify insight and accountability. As Anna Koivuniemi, head of Google DeepMind’s Impact Accelerator, stated: “AI can do a lot for the planet, but only humans can save it.”

- Video Advertisement -

Related Post

Digital Twins and Drones Slashing Bridge Recovery Times in Kentucky

Emerging technologies are transforming how disaster-stricken areas rebuild, with Kentucky recently demonstrating that “digital twins” and aerial surveillance can reduce infrastructure recovery timelines from months to mere hours. Following devastating floods in 2022, the state leveraged its Bridging Kentucky initiative to bypass traditional, slow-moving survey methods. By deploying drones and 3D laser scanning, engineering teams […]

New Bipartisan Legislation Targets Modernization of Rural Water Infrastructure

A new legislative initiative, the Futureproofing Local Operations for Water Systems (FLOWS) Act of 2026, has been introduced to address the growing technical and security gap facing rural water utilities across the United States. The bill proposes a targeted grant program designed to help small-scale drinking water and wastewater systems upgrade their aging infrastructure and […]

The Tech Behind Bentley’s Immersive Digital Twins

In the world of massive infrastructure, the biggest challenge isn’t just building a bridge—it’s helping people visualize it before it exists. Bentley Systems is solving this through its iLab innovation hub, where lead designer Liana O’Cleirigh is deploying a suite of high-tech tools that turn complex engineering data into immersive, human-scale experiences. At the heart […]

Why Infrastructure Needs Better Conversations, Not Just Better Tools

As climate-related disasters like wildfires and severe flooding become more frequent, communities across the United States are finding that their current infrastructure is struggling to keep up. Recent research suggests that moving from traditional asset management to digital one is a great move, but what is more crucial is cooperation. Duke University and industry partners […]

A New Era of Realism: Transforming Digital Twins with Gaussian Splatting

Digital twins, the virtual replicas of physical infrastructure, are undergoing a major transformation thanks to a new technology called Gaussian splatting. Traditionally, these models were built using “meshes,” which acted like a hollow, polygonal skin stretched over objects. While useful, meshes often struggled to capture fine details like thin wires, complex lighting, or reflective surfaces, […]

High-Tech “Digital Twins” Save Kentucky Millions in Bridge Repairs

Kentucky has discovered a high-tech solution to a massive infrastructure problem, proving that fixing 1,000 aging and flood-damaged bridges doesn’t have to take a decade or cost a fortune. By using Artificial Intelligence and “Digital Twin” technology, the engineering firm Qk4 has modernized the state’s bridge program, cutting inspection times by 90% and saving taxpayers […]