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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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PostApril 26, 2025

As climate change pushes dry weather east, striking changes are coming to D...

MIT Climate
A truck and house destroyed by the Smokehouse Creek Fire are seen, Friday, March 1, 2024, in Stinnett, Texas. The wildfire became the largest in state history at over one million acres. Climatologists believe wildfires will become more common as global temperatures warm
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

Lincoln Laboratory honored for technology transfer of hurricane-tracking sa...

MIT News
Two small satellites
PostMarch 31, 2025

For plants, urban heat islands don’t mimic global warming

MIT News
Meghan Blumstein studied red oak genotypes across New England, concentrating on trees that were within reach in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She then collaborated with people doing research at the Harvard Forest, a research forest in rural central Massachusetts.
PostMarch 21, 2025

Reengineering the global food system for a healthier planet

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Optimizing dietary choices for environmental and human health
PostNovember 25, 2024

New AI tool generates realistic satellite images of future flooding

MIT News
A generative AI model visualizes how floods in Texas would look like in satellite imagery. The original photo is on the left, and the AI generated image is in on the right.
PostNovember 21, 2024

Advancing urban tree monitoring with AI-powered digital twins

MIT News
MIT Assistant Professor Sara Beery contributed to the new Tree D-fusion system, which can generate a simulation-ready 3D model of a real tree from images such as those found on Google Street View. The system leverages a tree shape generated using species- and environment-specific data to create realistic, lifelike tree models.
PostNovember 1, 2024

Making agriculture more resilient to climate change

MIT News
PostOctober 23, 2024

Banking on Oregon forests: Despite challenges, carbon markets see big poten...

MIT Climate
PostOctober 23, 2024

Study: Marshes provide cost-effective coastal protection

MIT News
Graduate student Ernie I. H. Lee uses drone imaging and machine learning to help map salt marsh species, plant height, and shoots per bed area.

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