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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 25, 2022

Using artificial intelligence to find anomalies hiding in massive datasets

MIT News
A new machine-learning technique can pinpoint potential power grid failures and cascading traffic bottlenecks, in real time.
PostFebruary 22, 2022

New power sources

MIT News
In the mid-1990s, a few energy activists in Massachusetts had a vision: What if consumers had choice about the energy they consumed? Instead of being force-fed electricity sources selected by a utility company, what if cities, towns, and groups of individuals could purchase power that was cleaner and cheaper?
PostFebruary 3, 2022

Students dive into research with the MIT Climate and Sustainability Consort...

MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium
MIT undergraduates who participated in MCSC UROPs last fall include: (top row, left to right) Hannah Spilman, Claire Kim, Alfonso Restrepo, Cameron Dougal, and James Santoro; (bottom row, left to right) Tess Buchanan, Kezia Hector, Tamsin Nottage, and Ellie Vaserman.
PostFebruary 2, 2022

Reducing methane emissions at landfills

MIT News
The startup Loci Controls, begun at MIT, uses solar-powered devices to improve methane capture at gas collection wells in landfills.
PostFebruary 1, 2022

Energizing communities in Africa

MIT News
MIT senior Ayomikun Ayodeji seeks to expand access to reliable, affordable energy in his home country of Nigeria, and beyond.
PostJanuary 24, 2022

MIT Energy Initiative launches the Future Energy Systems Center

MIT Energy Initiative
MITEI’s Future Energy Systems Center examines the accelerating energy transition as emerging technology and policy, demographic trends, and economics reshape the landscape of energy supply and demand.
PostJanuary 3, 2022

Can data help quench the thirst of Pakistan’s most populous city?

MIT Technology Review
PostDecember 17, 2021

Selective separation could help alleviate critical metals shortage

MIT News
Pictured are rare earth oxides of neodymium, praseodymium, and dysprosium – all critical components for magnets – that have been processed with sulfidation technology.  The violet regions are neodymium-rich sulfide, the green regions are praseodymium oxysulfide, and the orange regions are dysprosium rich sulfides and oxysulfides.
PostDecember 15, 2021

The Soviets turned the Volga River into a machine. Then the machine broke.

MIT Technology Review
PostDecember 9, 2021

A tool to speed development of new solar cells

MIT News
A new system both predicts the efficiency of new photovoltaic solar cell materials and shows how much different input parameters affect output.

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