The world is not enough: growing waste in HPC-enabled academic practice
Caroline Bird, Chris Preist, Adrian Friday, Carolynne Lord, Adrian Jackson, Kelly Widdicks, Simon Lambert & Gabin Kayumbi. 2025.
ACM CHI Conference on Human Computer Interaction
Most research depends to some extent on technologies and computational infrastructures including, and perhaps especially, HCI. Despite the noted environmental impacts associated with information communication technology (ICT) globally, to date little consideration has been given as to how to limit the impact of research and innovation processes themselves. Working to understand the technical and cultural drivers of this impact within the specific but resource-intensive domain of high-performance computing (HPC), we conducted 25 interviews with academic researchers, providers, funders, and commissioners of HPC. We find intersecting socio-cultural and technical dimensions that link to research institutions like conferences, funders and universities that reinforce and embed, rather than challenge, expectations of growth and waste. At a time when large scale cloud systems, generative AI and ever larger, responsible and models are multiplying, we argue to de-escalate demand for computing, aiming for more moderate meaningful use of computational infrastructures — including within HCI itself.
Citation
Bird, C. M., Preist, C. W., Friday, A., Lord, C., Jackson, A., Widdicks, K., … Kayumbi, G. (2025). The world is not enough: growing waste in hpc-enabled academic practice. ACM CHI Conference on Human Computer Interaction.
BibTeX
@inproceedings{bird2025world, title={The world is not enough: growing waste in HPC-enabled academic practice}, author={Bird, Caroline M and Preist, Chris W and Friday, Adrian and Lord, Carolynne and Jackson, Adrian and Widdicks, Kelly and Lambert, Simon and Kayumbi, Gabin}, booktitle={ACM CHI Conference on Human Computer Interaction}, year={2025}, organization={Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)} }