Drawing on examples he's seen in his role as minister for science, Ayres says AI had could deliver real benefits for Australians over the next five to ten years.
[For example], the capacity of artificial intelligence to dramatically speed up pharmaceutical design so that we get more drugs, more targeted design developed in Australia into pharmacies to support Australians' health, cancer treatment designs, composite material design. And in the energy sector, being able to [...] smartly manage the energy grid so that we can expand renewables and expand electricity capability. There there is almost no area of technological improvement that won't be touched by artificial intelligence.
But with that rapid expansion comes real costs, including the vast amounts of electricity and water data centres consume.
Ayres said he'll resume working with state and territory governments on developing "data centre principles" very early next year. The Sydney Morning Herald and others have reported that the government is weighing up making new data centres invest in big wind and solar projects or else build their own batteries on-site.
Ayres says if data centres and new digital infrastructure end up paying for new generation and transmission capability, "that's a net addition to the electricity system, not a drain on resources".