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The AI Act and its green blind spots: Hidden environmental risks in the AI lifecycle

  • Imad Antoine Ibrahim*
  • , Esmat Zaidan
  • , Jon Truby
  • , Thomas Hoppe
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University of Twente
  • National University of Singapore

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The European Union Artificial Intelligence (AI) Act is the first comprehensive regulatory framework for AI, establishing a risk-based approach. Environmental impacts are not considered a separate category of risks but are tackled indirectly through procedural mechanisms, including transparency, documentation, and governance requirements. Many have questioned whether this approach adequately covers environmental concerns. Yet, few examined how such claims manifest through its compliance mechanisms. The article addresses this gap through a doctrinal and operational analysis of the Act, identifying and coding the environment-relevant provisions across its Articles and Annexes. Particular attention is paid to implementation via conformity assessment and post-market governance processes. The analysis highlights a tension between the Union's constitutional commitment to environmental protection and the often modest, non-mandatory environment-related obligations under the Act, scattered across procedural duties. Based on these findings, an operational reform pathway is suggested that relies on shared standards integrating life-cycle assessment and post-market monitoring, without altering the Act's risk classification.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103284
JournalTechnology in Society
Volume86
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2026

Keywords

  • AI Act
  • Digital decarbonisation
  • Environmental integration
  • Green deal alignment
  • Lifecycle assessment
  • Sustainable AI

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