Part I: Outcomes from the IEEE–ITU Sustainable Climate Symposium
IEEE–International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Symposium: Achieving a Sustainable Climate 2025 Outcomes: Capitalizing on AI for Energy-Efficient and Climate Resilient Telecommunications Networks
By Marta Koch, IEEE Europe Member & PhD Researcher & Teaching Facilitator, Imperial College London with Alan J Weissberger, IEEE Techblog Content Manager
Editor’s Note: This is the first of a two part article summarizing this ITU-IEEE Symposium. The second article is here.
Introduction:
Telecommunications networks are increasingly recognized as critical infrastructure for both economic development and societal resilience. As climate change accelerates and energy systems undergo rapid transformation, the telecoms sector faces a dual challenge: 1.] Reducing its own environmental footprint while ensuring reliable connectivity under growing physical, climatic, and 2.] Systemic stress.
These two themes were the focus of the IEEE–International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Symposium on Achieving a Sustainable Climate, which was held in December 2025 at the ITU headquarters in Geneva.
The symposium convened researchers, industry leaders, standards bodies, and United Nations agencies to examine how digital transformation, artificial intelligence (AI), and emerging ICT solutions can support the energy transition and climate mitigation and adaptation, and the governance and standardisation developments needed to effectively and sustainably leverage this technology globally.
As an Imperial College London researcher and IEEE member, I attended the symposium as part of ongoing work at the intersection of telecommunications, artificial intelligence, and climate action, with a focus on the governance, design, and deployment of AI-enabled systems for climate mitigation and adaptation, as well as the environmental and systems-level sustainability of AI-driven digital infrastructure.
Organization and Collaboration:
The symposium was co-organized by the ITU Telecom Standardization Bureau (ITU-T) and ITU T Study Group 5, which focuses on environment, climate action, circular economy, and electromagnetic fields. This collaboration underscored the central role of international standardization in shaping sustainable, climate-resilient ICT systems and provided a strong standards-oriented framework for discussions on AI deployment, energy efficiency, and network resilience [6].
Symposium photo courtesy of the ITU
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Key Discussion Themes:
Across plenary sessions, thematic panels and case studies, several cross-cutting issues emerged:
- Expanding role of AI and machine learning (ML) in enabling more energy-efficient, resilient, and inclusive telecommunications networks.
- The role of the ICT sector in accelerating decarbonisation and strengthening climate adaptation, particularly in support of the global energy transition
- Interactions between physical and digital infrastructure systems, including electrification and communications, as enablers of circular economy models
- Digital and AI standardisation as foundations for sustainable, climate-resilient development and place- and people-based outcomes
- Intersections between decarbonisation, electrification, circularity, digital access, and equity
- Public–private collaboration models supporting climate finance, eco-design, and scalable deployment in climate-vulnerable and developing regions.
International Policy Governance Perspectives at the Symposium:
The symposium featured strong representation from international organisations, grounding technical discussions in policy, standards, finance, and real-world deployment realities across the ICT, energy, and climate domains.
ITU delegates Tomas Lamanauskas, Seizo Onoe, Bilel Jamoussi, and Dominique Würges emphasized the importance of aligning global mandates with local needs in sustainable ICT ecosystems.
The following are essential to both decarbonization and resilient digital infrastructure: robust standards, interoperability, and AI governance frameworks (particularly those addressing environmental sustainability, circular economy principles, and responsible management of electromagnetic fields). That message was consistent with the opening plenary’s framing of international policy, eco-design, and circularity as foundational for practical deployment.
Energy and electrification perspectives were discussed by Dario Liguti of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe and Norela Constantinescu of the International Renewable Energy Agency. They highlighted the global energy transition focus on both progress and persistent gaps in decarbonization and electrification. Coordinated planning between energy systems and telecommunications can significantly improve resilience, system efficiency, and equity for climate-adaptive services.
Industrial deployment and logistics viewpoints were provided by Luca Longo of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization and Yaxuan Chen of the Universal Postal Union. They described how integrated ICT and energy solutions could enhance operational outcomes, sustainability, and service delivery across industrial and sectoral contexts. Cross-sector collaboration was identified as a critical enabler of scalable impact.
Standards alignment was discussed by Matthew Doherty of the International Electrotechnical Commission and Noelia García Nebra of the International Organization for Standardization. They reinforced the essential need for international standards frameworks for translating research and innovation into deployable, interoperable solutions. This theme resonated strongly with the standards session’s emphasis on practical tools to support sustainable, climate-resilient outcomes across markets and regions.
Financing and digital innovation perspectives were contributed by Seth Ayers of the World Bank, who highlighted how digital and AI-enabled approaches can help unlock finance, de-risk investment, and expand access to sustainable energy and connectivity solutions in underserved and marginalised contexts, supporting climate resilience and inclusive growth.
Disaster risk reduction and emergency management perspectives were contributed by Yuji Maeda of NTT, Inc., Maeda-son highlighted how advanced aerial technologies and environmental sensing can be used to mitigate the impacts of extreme natural events. He shared ground-breaking research at NTT in Japan demonstrating the world’s first drone designed to act as a “flying lightning rod”, an invention selected by TIME Magazine as one of the Best Inventions of 2025. They are using a protective Faraday cage and a conductive tether to deliberately trigger and safely redirect lightning strikes away from critical infrastructure, illustrating the potential for drone-enabled systems to improve emergency response, infrastructure protection, and climate resilience.
Innovation diffusion was addressed by Heather Jacobs of WIPO GREEN, who underscored the importance of technology transfer, matchmaking platforms, and collaboration mechanisms in scaling affordable and climate-relevant digital and energy technologies. Her remarks highlighted the symposium’s focus on public–private partnerships and global deployment pathways.
A European Green Digital Coalition case study was presented by Ilias Iakovidis of the European Commission Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology. He highlighted the development and deployment of a scientific methodology to assess the Net Carbon Impact of ICT solutions. His contribution demonstrated how digitalisation’s sustainability benefits can be quantified and scaled through coordinated industry engagement, financial sector alignment, and evidence-based deployment guidelines.
The growing Global Initiative on Resilience to Natural Hazards through AI Solutions was presented by Elena Xoplaki, Vice-Chair of the UN ITU, WMO, and UNEP Global Initiative on Resilience to Natural Hazards. She explained how AI, data integration, and resilient telecommunications networks underpin multi-hazard early warning systems and climate risk reduction efforts worldwide [5].
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Part II. of this report, listing all references, is here.
About Marta Koch:
Marta Koch is an IEEE member, PhD Researcher and Teaching Facilitator at Imperial College London, Research Associate at the Oxford Computational Political Science Group at the University of Oxford and Research Consultant at UNOPS. She has been nominated as research delegate to UN Climate Change (UNFCCC), UNEP, UNDESA, UNIDO and ITU meetings.
Her research and consultancy work focuses on digital and AI governance, development and deployment for climate action and sustainable development, with particular emphasis on climate technology digital and physical infrastructures and the sustainability of AI and digitalisation. Her research has been funded by the United Nations, Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and the UK Science & Technology Network (STN) under the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office and the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology, and endorsed by the UNESCO International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development.



