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Climate News at MIT

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PostJune 19, 2025

When Earth iced over, early life may have sheltered in meltwater ponds

MIT News
Researchers Ian Hawes of the University of Waikato and Marc Schallenberg of the University of Otago measure the physicochemical conditions of a meltwater pond.
PostJune 5, 2025

How will U.S. land use change by 2050?

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
How will U.S. land use change by 2050?
PostMay 22, 2025

Study: Climate change may make it harder to reduce smog in some regions

MIT News
A modeling study shows that global warming will likely make it harder to reduce ground-level ozone, a respiratory irritant that is a key component of smog, by cutting nitrogen oxide emissions.
PostApril 11, 2025

Hundred-year storm tides will occur every few decades in Bangladesh, scient...

MIT News
For the coastal country of Bangladesh, once-in-a-century storm tides could strike every 10 years — or more often — by the end of the century, scientists report. In this photo, a Bangladeshi woman and child walk over the top of a sandbag embankment in Khulna on May 4, 2019.
PostApril 4, 2025

Sustainability science: navigating the challenges of global change

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
MIT Global Change Forum 47
PodcastMarch 20, 2025

E3: Did climate change do that?

TILclimate Podcast
TILclimate logo
PodcastMarch 6, 2025

E2: Hasn't the climate changed before?

TILclimate Podcast
TILclimate logo
PostMarch 5, 2025

Study: The ozone hole is healing, thanks to global reduction of CFCs

MIT News
An MIT-led study confirms the Antarctic ozone layer is healing as a direct result of global efforts to reduce ozone-depleting substances. Foreground image of the ozone layer is from Sept. 28, 2024.
PostFebruary 19, 2025

Projecting and reducing the global economic impacts of climate change

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Photo: Los Angeles wildfires, January 2025 (Source: City of Irvine, California)
PostFebruary 13, 2025

Mission: Climate

MIT Spectrum
Storm clouds hover over a green field.

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