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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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PostSeptember 18, 2024

Liftoff: The Climate Project at MIT takes flight

MIT News
Monday’s event, “The Climate Project at MIT: Launching the Missions,” drew a capacity crowd at the Samberg Center. The project is “a whole-of-MIT mobilization,” President Sally A. Kornbluth said in her opening remarks.
PostAugust 20, 2024

Creating connection with science communication

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
“Photography was a door into science journalism,” Graduate Program in Science Writing student Sophie Hartley notes. “It lets you capture the raw beauty of a moment and return to it later.”
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.
PostJuly 17, 2024

Collaborative effort supports an MIT resilient to the impacts of extreme he...

MIT Office of Sustainability
A heat sensor captures data in the Kendall/MIT Open Space.
PostJuly 8, 2024

“They can see themselves shaping the world they live in”

MIT Open Learning
Langston Reid, Vishnu Bharath, and Simon Zall (left to right) discuss their project at the 2024 Day of AI global celebration at the Museum of Science. Day of AI is a free, hands-on curriculum developed by the MIT Responsible AI for Social Empowerment and Education (RAISE) initiative.
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
PodcastJune 6, 2024

E10: 2°C: the story of the global climate goal

TILclimate Podcast
TILclimate logo
PostMay 8, 2024

Study: Heavy snowfall and rain may contribute to some earthquakes

MIT News
Episodes of heavy snowfall and rain likely contributed to a swarm of earthquakes over the past several years in northern Japan, MIT researchers find. Their study is the first to show climate conditions could initiate some quakes. Pictured is a scene from Japan’s Noto Peninsula.
PostApril 29, 2024

An AI dataset carves new paths to tornado detection

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Mark Veillette (left) and James Kurdzo compiled TorNet, an open-source dataset containing thousands of radar images depicting tornadoes and other severe storms. The dataset can serve as a benchmark for researchers to develop tornado-detecting AI algorithms.
PostApril 18, 2024

Using deep learning to image the Earth’s planetary boundary layer

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
This schematic of the planetary boundary layer (red line) shows exchanges of moisture and movement of aerosols that occur between the Earth's surface and this lowest level of the atmosphere. Lincoln Laboratory researchers are using deep learning techniques to learn more about PBL features, important for weather and climate studies.

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