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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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PostMarch 22, 2023

Helping the cause of environmental resilience

MIT News
Haruko Wainwright
PostMarch 22, 2023

Exploring a Suitable Business Model for Nuclear Batteries

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
PostMarch 16, 2023

Low-cost device can measure air pollution anywhere

MIT News
MIT researchers have made an open-source version of the “City Scanner” mobile pollution detector that lets people check air quality anywhere, cheaply. Pictured are some examples of the latest version of the device, called Flatburn, as well as a researcher attaching a prototype to a car.
PostMarch 8, 2023

Working to make nuclear energy more competitive

MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
“Nuclear power is safe, sustainable, and reliable; now we need to be on time and on budget [to achieve] climate goals” says MIT doctoral student Assil Halimi.
PostMarch 8, 2023

Study: Smoke particles from wildfires can erode the ozone layer

MIT News
An MIT study finds that smoke particles in the stratosphere can trigger chemical reactions that erode the ozone layer — and that smoke particles from Australian wildfires widened the ozone hole by 10 percent in 2020. This map shows the size and shape of the ozone hole over the South Pole on Oct. 5, 2022.
PostFebruary 23, 2023

Improving health outcomes by targeting climate and air pollution simultaneo...

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Emissions from coal-fired power plants increase atmospheric concentrations of climate-destabilizing greenhouse gases and health-damaging air pollutants. Combined climate/air-quality policies could help reduce those concentrations and improve public health.
PostFebruary 21, 2023

Study: Carbon-neutral pavements are possible by 2050, but rapid policy and ...

MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub
IH610 in Texas, pictured here, offers an example of concrete pavements. Pavements are one of many applications for concrete.
PostFebruary 16, 2023

Preparing students for the new nuclear

MIT News
For his LGO internship in management and nuclear science and engineering, Santiago Andrade worked at Caterpillar in Lafayette, Indiana, where he helped the company explore the potential use of nuclear microreactors to power mining sites.
PostJanuary 31, 2023

Webinar by Prof. Mark Z. Jacobson, Stanford University, Wednesday, February...

MACA - MIT Alumni for Climate Action
PostJanuary 13, 2023

Computers that power self-driving cars could be a huge driver of global car...

MIT News
MIT researchers determined that 1 billion autonomous vehicles, each driving for one hour per day with a computer consuming 840 watts, would consume enough energy to generate about the same amount of emissions as data centers currently do.

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