Science - 27.03.2020

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SCIENCE

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Computer mimics neurons
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | The computer
got a nose job. Intel researchers reported
last week that they trained Loihi, the com-
pany’s “neuromorphic” processing chip, to
identify 10 odors based on input from
72 chemical sensors—an ability they say
could be used to sniff out bombs and
drugs. After just one exposure, the chip
could identify each odor even when oth-
ers masked it. Unlike traditional circuits,
neuromorphic processors intermingle
logic and memory. That makes them
energy efficient, and good at artificial
intelligence tasks such as pattern recogni-
tion. Loihi contains more than 2 billion
transistors, which mimic the behavior of

130,000 neurons and 130 million synapses.
This month, Intel said, researchers could
access its neuromorphic computing sys-
tem, containing 64 Loihi chips, through a
cloud-based server.

A call for waterworks
GLOBAL WARMING | To adapt to climate
change and improve health and living
standards, countries should triple spend-
ing, to $114 billion annually, to build safe
drinking water and wastewater manage-
ment systems, the United Nations says in
a 22 March report. Warming temperatures
threaten to deplete groundwater supplies,
among other risks. But increased spend-
ing on unconventional technologies—such

as collecting water from fog and using
low-volume irrigation—could help provide
adequate supplies while decreasing the
overall carbon footprint of water and
wastewater utilities, the report says. Few
countries say much about water projects
in their plans for reducing carbon emis-
sions under the Paris agreement. And in
2016, water management projects directly
received only about 3% of financing to
mitigate and adapt to climate change. Half
the world’s population lacks safely man-
aged wastewater systems.

Iran, France swap detainees
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS | A French
sociologist jailed in Tehran, Iran, since

I


n a victory for conservation, the Cambodian govern-
ment announced on 18 March that it is suspending for
10 years plans to build two hydropower dams on the
Mekong River. The move helps preserve a freshwater
ecosystem that, after the Amazon, is the world’s most
biologically diverse. It also supports a vast fishing in-
dustry. Cambodia now relies on hydropower for nearly 50%
of its electricity, but will turn to coal, natural gas, and solar
energy to meet its future power needs. The Mekong begins
on the Tibetan Plateau and flows through several countries,
including Cambodia and Vietnam, before emptying into the

South China Sea. It has been under increasing pressure from
development, pollution, and climate change; drought and
upstream dams in China have exacerbated recent low water
levels in the lower Mekong. Adding to the river system’s
woes, Laos opened two hydropower dams on the Mekong’s
main branch in the past 6 months, and Cambodia said it may
yet build dams on Mekong tributaries. Still, conservationists
praised Cambodia’s decision. Maintaining the free flow of
the lower Mekong is “the best decision for both people and
nature,” Teak Seng, Cambodia country director for the World
Wildlife Fund, said in a statement.

BIODIVERSITY

Cambodia halts Mekong dams


NEWS

IN BRIEF


Edited by Jeffrey Brainard

Cambodia’s Lower Sesan 2
hydroelectric dam,
built on a Mekong River
tributary and opened
in 2018, drew criticism.

1408 27 MARCH 2020 • VOL 367 ISSUE 6485
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