KEY POINTS
  • The DeepMind Energy unit, which has attracted its fair share of attention over the years, has vanished and none of the company's staff mention it on their LinkedIn profiles.
  • At one point, DeepMind wanted to use its AI technology to optimize National Grid, which owns and operates the infrastructure that provides electricity to homes and businesses around Britain.
  • The organizations spent a considerable amount of time working together, but there were many hurdles to overcome if anything was ever going to be implemented.
Demis Hassabis, co-founder of Google's artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepMind.

LONDON — Artificial intelligence (AI) lab DeepMind has shifted its focus from climate change to other areas of science and is pursuing its original mission of creating artificial general intelligence (AGI), which is widely seen as the holy grail of the nascent technology, according to several people familiar with the matter.  

While DeepMind, acquired by Google in 2014 for $600 million, denies it has shifted its focus, several key climate change researchers that were part of the company's energy unit have left the company over the last two years, and it has made few climate change-related announcements.