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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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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.
PostFebruary 7, 2025

Cleaning up critical minerals and materials production, using microwave pla...

MIT News
6K’s microwave plasma technology, called UniMelt, uses beams of tightly controlled thermal plasma to melt or vaporize precursor materials into particles with precise sizes and crystalline phases. Pictured is a photo from 6K’s factory showing some of its large plasma equipment.
PostFebruary 4, 2025

Climate Solutions Simulators Commended in Financial Times Awards Program

MIT Climate Policy Center
MIT Sloan Professor John Sterman making a presentation related to the climate policy simulators.
PostJanuary 21, 2025

For clean ammonia, MIT engineers propose going underground

MIT News
MIT engineers developed a way to make clean ammonia, without fossil-fuel-powered chemical plants, using the Earth as a geochemical reactor, producing ammonia underground.
PostJanuary 10, 2025

Minimizing the carbon footprint of bridges and other structures

MIT News
Before coming to MIT, 2024 MAD Design Fellow Zane Schemmer, who grew up in the mountains of Utah, earned a BS and MS in civil and environmental engineering from the University of California at Berkeley, where his graduate work focused on seismic design.
PostDecember 20, 2024

In Sweden, broad consensus on climate action spurs an energy transition in ...

MIT Climate
The main debate in Sweden is not whether to build more zero-carbon energy sources, but rather, which ones.
PostDecember 16, 2024

New climate chemistry model finds “non-negligible” impacts of potential...

MIT Energy Initiative
MIT research has provided new insights into how hydrogen fuel that escapes from pipelines and storage facilities can affect the climate. The results reinforce the need for preventing leakage if this clean-burning fuel comes into wide use.
PostDecember 13, 2024

What will it take for the American steel industry to go ‘fossil-free’?

MIT Climate
At HYBRIT's fossil-free steel plant in Luleå, Sweden, hydrogen made with renewable electricity turns reddish iron ore pellets, left, into grey pellets of sponge iron, which are ready to be melted down and made into steel.
PostDecember 11, 2024

Enabling a circular economy in the built environment

MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium
Concrete waste accounts for the majority of construction and demolition debris, representing over 60 percent of the total volume of more than 600 million tons in 2018.

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