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Climate News at MIT

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PostJanuary 26, 2020

For cheaper solar cells, thinner really is better

MIT News
PostJanuary 6, 2020

Preventing energy loss in windows

MIT News
PostDecember 11, 2019

Taking the carbon out of construction with engineered wood

MIT News
A 70-unit British Columbia lakeside resort hotel was built with local engineered wood products, including cross-laminated timber. New research explores the potential environmental and economic impact in the United States of substituting lumber for energy-intensive building products such as cement and steel.
PostDecember 5, 2019

Understanding the impact of deep-sea mining

MIT News
Professor Thomas Peacock (left) with graduate students Rohit Balasaheb Supekar (center) and Carlos Munoz Royo (right) aboard the RV Sally Ride.
PostDecember 3, 2019

Taking the carbon out of construction

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
PostNovember 24, 2019

How Conflict Resolution in International Trade can Help Ensure Environmenta...

Riasat Noor
PostNovember 19, 2019

The toilet that doesn't flush waste but eliminates it

Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS)
PostNovember 12, 2019

New tools could improve the way cement seals oil wells

MIT News
Oil and natural gas wells require concrete to seal the area between the well casing and the surrounding borehole, but because of the high temperatures and pressures at depth, it has been hard to study how these specialized cements harden. Now, a new method developed at MIT can help to fill in that missing knowledge.
PostOctober 30, 2019

System provides cooling with no electricity

MIT News
In the photo on the left, a disk of the new insulating material blocks and reflects visible light, hiding the MIT logo beneath it. But seen in infrared light, at right, the material is transparent and the logo is visible.
PostOctober 24, 2019

Carbon Offsets for Freight Transport Decarbonization

Suzanne Greene

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