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Climate News at MIT

The latest climate change research and action happening in and around MIT.
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Advocacy & ActivismClear All
PostAugust 8, 2024

Going Dutch on climate

MIT Energy Initiative
As part of a MITEI-sponsored field trip to the Netherlands to experience the country’s approach to sustainable energy, MIT students received a tour of EnTranCe, a facility dedicated to researching hydrogen usage within the energy grid, at Hanze University in Groningen.
PostJune 25, 2024

EU and US Approaches to Address Energy Poverty

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
European plug against a backdrop of US dollars
PodcastDecember 7, 2023

E8: Why does it take five years to build a wind farm?

TILclimate Podcast
TILclimate logo
PostJuly 7, 2023

Who is ‘Held’ of Held v. State of Montana?

MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative
Saturated farmland off of Steel Bridge Road in Kalispell after flooding along the Flathead River on June 15, 2022.
PostJuly 7, 2023

Montana Lawmakers Double Down on Fossil Fuels in 2023 Legislative Session

MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative
Sen. Mark Noland, R-Bigfork, said he introduced Senate Bill 557 in response to a proposed gold mine in Paradise Valley that was stopped in court
PostJuly 7, 2023

‘To a Clean and Healthful Environment’

MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative
A meadow below Clements Mountain is replete with bright glacier lilies on Logan Pass in Glacier National Park on June 19, 2021
PostJuly 7, 2023

Montana Youth Prepare for Trial in Bellwether Climate Case Against State

MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative
Rikki Held is the lead plaintiff in the constitutional climate change lawsuit Held v. Montana.
PostApril 11, 2023

Responding to Ukraine’s “ocean of suffering”

MIT Energy Initiative
Ian Miller SM ’18 (left) with his colleague Evan Platt SM ’20 in Kyiv's Mykhailivs'ka Square. Alongside Ukrainians, they co-founded Zero Line, a nonprofit delivering medical aid, vehicles, and equipment to Ukrainians on the front lines.
PostSeptember 21, 2022

3 Questions: Janelle Knox-Hayes on producing renewable energy that communit...

MIT News
MIT professors Janelle Knox-Hayes and Donald Sadoway call for a new approach to wind-power deployment, one that engages communities in a process of “co-design” and adapts solutions to local needs.
PostFebruary 22, 2022

New power sources

MIT News
In the mid-1990s, a few energy activists in Massachusetts had a vision: What if consumers had choice about the energy they consumed? Instead of being force-fed electricity sources selected by a utility company, what if cities, towns, and groups of individuals could purchase power that was cleaner and cheaper?

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