All the events here are relevant to people working in dementia research. If you would like to add your own you can submit an event
- This event has passed.
Enviro impact of computing – health & life sciences research
07/11/2023 @ 10:00 am - 4:00 pm
The first Environmental Impacts of Computing in Health & Life Sciences Research Workshop will take place on the 7th of November, 2023.
When: 7th of November, 2023 from 10am to 4pm GMT
Where: Wellcome Trust (London, UK) and online
Format: Hybrid (in person and online), free (registration required)
Research has a large role to play in combating the climate crisis, but research processes also have a significant carbon footprint. Computations in particular are now an integral part of research in health and life sciences, but also come with large and underestimated environmental costs. When considering computer manufacturing, and the energy required to store and process data, it becomes crucial to acknowledge and mitigate the contribution of our research to climate change.
The ICT sector (Information and Communication Technologies) is responsible for an estimated 1.8-3.9% of global greenhouse gas emissions, more than the aviation sector. Data centres around the world have a yearly carbon footprint of around 100 MT CO2e, equivalent to US commercial aviation. Since the impact from computing of a single life science experiment can reach tonnes of CO2e, it becomes crucial that we acknowledge and mitigate the impacts of our work. And as the people who best understand our own work, we are ideally placed to do so.
As the need for computational power in research grows, including increasing adoption of AI tools, we must address the challenges and opportunities in making scientific research computing more sustainable.
This free one-day workshop will include presentations from practising health and life scientists, success stories of more environmentally-friendly computing and group discussions. Topics will include the carbon footprint of high-performance computing, energy-efficient data processing pipelines, and the benefits of efficient programming.
By attending this event, you will:
- Learn how to reduce the carbon footprint of your own research computing, also giving you the ability to feed these insights back to your institution.
- Debate what barriers to sustainable computing exist and work towards potential solutions.
- Network with other health and life sciences researchers interested in reducing the carbon footprint of their computing, providing new opportunities for collaboration.
- Contribute to an emerging community of climate-conscious scientists.
We are holding the workshop in person to facilitate discussion and debate, and bursaries are available to support attendees who wouldn’t be able to join otherwise (more on this below). In addition, to maximise accessibility, this event will be hybrid, with an option to join via video conferencing, including a live stream, and opportunities to ask questions and engage in group discussion.
WHO IS IT FOR?
This workshop is for researchers in the health and life sciences (e.g. neuroimaging, biology, biochemistry, genetics) who use heavy computational resources for their work (i.e. analyses that run for several hours and/or use institutional servers). It will also be relevant to researchers from other fields of science who rely on heavy computation, or for stakeholders involved with academic research that relies on heavy computation (e.g. funders, institutional IT service providers).
On the other hand, if your computing usage is mostly word/excel/web browser, then computing is probably a minor part of your carbon footprint and this may not be the most relevant to you (but you are very welcome if you’re interested in the topic anyway!).
Importantly, you don’t need any prior knowledge of sustainability to come, or expertise in computer science. An interest in reducing the carbon footprint of your research is all you need!
If you have any questions, please contact the workshop organiser Dr Nick Souter at N.Souter@sussex.ac.uk and we look forward to seeing you on 7th November.
nt