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Climate News at MIT

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PostOctober 24, 2019

MIT engineers develop a new way to remove carbon dioxide from air

MIT News
In this diagram of the new system, air entering from top right passes to one of two chambers (the gray rectangular structures) containing battery electrodes that attract the carbon dioxide. Then the airflow is switched to the other chamber, while the accumulated carbon dioxide in the first chamber is flushed into a separate storage tank (at right). These alternating flows allow for continuous operation of the two-step process.
PostOctober 1, 2019

Reuse, refill, replenish

Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS)
PostSeptember 25, 2019

The optimum allocation of available budget to joint climate control mechani...

MIT Energy Initiative
PostSeptember 17, 2019

J-WAFS announces 2019 Solutions Grants supporting agriculture and clean wat...

MIT News
Left: A water sample undergoing testing using the J-WAFS-funded water quality test kit soon to be deployed throughout Nepal. Right: Citrus trees infected with citrus greening disease are highly contagious and can wipe out whole orange groves. A J-WAFS-funded sensor could help farmers detect the disease much earlier.
PostAugust 27, 2019

Reducing the cost of decarbonization through cutting-edge carbon capture in...

MIT Energy Initiative
PostAugust 10, 2019

Strengthening Community Capitals to Build Climate Resilient Communities

Azaz Zaman
MIT Climate Portal
PostAugust 9, 2019

Giving up just half your hamburgers can really help the climate

MIT Technology Review
PostAugust 5, 2019

Following the current: MIT examines water consumption sustainability

MIT News
MIT Climate Portal
PostJuly 29, 2019

Removing carbon dioxide from power plant exhaust

MIT News
MIT Climate Portal
PostJuly 24, 2019

Tekuma Frenchman designs new marine city in China

MIT News
MIT Climate Portal

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