Using AI to prepare and evaluate environmental assessments risks ‘robodebt-style’ failures, scientists say | Environment
Publish Date: 2026-04-06 11:01:00
Source Domain: www.theguardian.com
Conservationists and scientists have warned a mining lobby proposal to use artificial intelligence to speed up national environmental approvals could generate “Robodebt-style” failures, putting threatened species at further risk.
The Minerals Council of Australia has asked the government to spend $13m to trial the use of AI to help companies prepare applications and help the federal government make decisions.
But the Biodiversity Council, a group of independent experts across 11 universities, told Guardian Australia while AI could play a role in simple tasks, automating environment assessments “could lead to Robodebt-style failure, where computers make flawed decisions without transparency”, that could ultimately push species closer to extinction.
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Robodebt refers to the automated debt-recovery scheme which, between 2015 and 2019, wrongly accused hundreds of thousands of welfare recipients of overpayments.
Lis Ashby, the Biodiversity Council’s lead on policy and innovation, said the country’s cornerstone environment law – the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act – was “full of vague language and broad ministerial discretion”.
“The vague rules add to the current length of assessment processes, because they impede rules-based decision-making by human assessors. The lack of clear rules will be even more problematic for an AI tool,” she said.
“Setting clear rules in the National Environmental Standards, including defining what is unacceptable, would speed up assessment times, even without AI help, and is important for any future adoption of AI.”
Brendan Sydes, the national biodiversity policy adviser at the Australian Conservation Foundation, said the organisation was “sceptical” of the minerals council’s push.
“Clearly technology has a role to play in making sure nature protection laws deliver nature protection outcomes as efficiently as possible. But while AI might be a…