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WasteClear All
PostFebruary 14, 2022

Resilience in Action: 2021 Sustainability Reports showcase accomplishments

MIT Office of Sustainability
MITOS Annual Report & GHG Brochure Covers
PostDecember 17, 2021

Selective separation could help alleviate critical metals shortage

MIT News
Pictured are rare earth oxides of neodymium, praseodymium, and dysprosium – all critical components for magnets – that have been processed with sulfidation technology.  The violet regions are neodymium-rich sulfide, the green regions are praseodymium oxysulfide, and the orange regions are dysprosium rich sulfides and oxysulfides.
Educator GuideOctober 8, 2021

Supply Chains and Climate Change Educator Guide

TILclimate Podcast
TILclimate cleaning up clean tech guide for educators
PostSeptember 28, 2021

Pulling methane out of the atmosphere could slow global warming—if we can...

MIT Technology Review
PostAugust 19, 2021

Solar panels are a pain to recycle. These companies are trying to fix that....

MIT Technology Review
PostJuly 27, 2021

Investigating materials for safe, secure nuclear power

MIT News
A longstanding interest in radiation’s effects on metals has drawn Michael Short into new areas such as nuclear security and microreactors.
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.
PostApril 29, 2021

China’s transition to electric vehicles

MIT Energy Initiative
“The benefits appear to be the same order of magnitude as the costs,” says I-Yun Lisa Hsieh PhD ’20 of China’s transition to electric vehicles. “It’s so close that we need to be careful to get the numbers right.”
PostFebruary 25, 2021

King Climate Action Initiative announces new research to test and scale cli...

Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL)
Researchers conduct carbon monitoring in a peat swamp forest in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia in 2017.
PostJanuary 6, 2021

InEnTec: Turning trash into valuable chemical products and clean fuels

MIT Energy Initiative
This InEnTec plant in Oregon will receive feedstock materials, such as medical and industrial waste, and — using InEnTec’s plasma gasification process — will convert them into high-purity hydrogen for use in industry and fuel cell vehicles.

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