CLAILGMar 9, 2025

Green Prompting

arXiv:2503.10666v25 citationsh-index: 3Has Code
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the high inference costs of LLMs, which impact sustainability and financial feasibility, by providing insights for optimizing prompt design, though it is incremental in nature.

The study investigated how prompt and response characteristics affect the energy cost of LLM inference, finding that semantic meaning and specific keywords have a greater impact than prompt length, with energy consumption varying significantly across tasks.

Large Language Models (LLMs) have become widely used across various domains spanning search engines, code generation, and text creation. However, a major concern associated with their adoption is the high cost of inference, impacting both their sustainability and financial feasibility. In this study, we empirically study how different prompt and response characteristics directly impact LLM inference energy cost. We conduct experiments leveraging three open-source transformer-based LLMs across three task types$-$question answering, sentiment analysis, and text generation. For each inference, we analyzed prompt and response characteristics (length, semantic meaning, time taken, energy consumption). Our results demonstrate that even when presented with identical tasks, models generate responses with varying characteristics and subsequently exhibit distinct energy consumption patterns. We found that prompt length is less significant than the semantic meaning of the task itself. In addition, we identified specific keywords associated with higher or lower energy usage that vary between associated tasks. These findings highlight the importance of prompt design in optimizing inference efficiency. We conclude that the semantic meaning of prompts and certain task-related keywords significantly impact inference costs, leading the way for deeper exploration towards creating energy-adaptive LLMs.

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