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Students gather around a display of a coral reef at an MIT event

Climate News at MIT

The latest climate change research and action happening in and around MIT.

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PostJune 25, 2021

3Q: Why “nuclear batteries” offer a new approach to carbon-free energy

MIT News
This cut-away rendering of the MIT nuclear battery concept shows important components such as the instrumentation and control module, the reactor, and the power module.
PostJune 24, 2021

Tackling the problem of global technology waste

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Richmond landfill in Bulawayo, the second largest city in Zimbabwe. Unless properly managed, such landfills can pose serious environmental and public health hazards.
PostJune 23, 2021

Revisiting a quantum past for a fusion future

Plasma Science and Fusion Center
Can a classical physics question be handled on a quantum computer? Abhay Ram believes the answer is yes, and that it will accelerate understanding of electromagnetic wave phenomena in plasma.
PostJune 22, 2021

Grace Moore ’21 receives Michel David-Weill Scholarship

MIT Department of Materials Science and Engineering - DMSE
Grace Moore '21 will begin her studies at Sciences Po this fall. Her goal is to work in environmental policy to address climate change.
PostJune 22, 2021

Keeping it Cool

MIT Spectrum
Alpha Arsano SM ’17. Photo: Erin Eve
PostJune 15, 2021

Aggregate Confusion Project targets better ways to judge corporate behavior...

MIT Spectrum
Roberto Rigobon PhD ’97 heads the Aggregate Confusion Project. Photo: Courtesy of MIT Sloan
PostJune 10, 2021

ESI Program Here and Real Connects MIT Climate Research to Communities

MIT Spectrum
Greene County, Pennsylvania, is a case-study site for the Environmental Solutions Initiative program Here and Real. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
PostJune 8, 2021

MIT J-WAFS awards eight grants in seventh round of seed funding

Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS)
MIT faculty receiving 2021 J-WAFS seed grants: (top row, left to right) Amos Winter, Ariel Furst, Elfatih Eltahir, Jeffrey Grossman, Evelyn Wang; (bottom row, left to right) Mary Gehring, Rohit Karnik, Pratik Shah, Karen Zheng, Benedetto Marelli.
PostJune 8, 2021

MITEI researchers build a supply chain model to support the hydrogen econom...

MIT Energy Initiative
Researchers estimate a cost reduction in the hydrogen supply chain of about 9 percent by using trucks as both a means of energy transmission and of storage in a new hydrogen supply chain planning model, by bringing down the need for other storage solutions.
PostJune 7, 2021

Tiny particles power chemical reactions

MIT News
MIT engineers have discovered a way to generate electricity using tiny carbon particles that can create an electric current simply by interacting with an organic solvent in which they’re floating. The particles are made from crushed carbon nanotubes (blue) coated with a Teflon-like polymer (green).

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