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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 13, 2025

Pivot Bio is using microbial nitrogen to make agriculture more sustainable

MIT News
Pivot’s products are already being used to grow corn, wheat, barley, oats, and other grains across millions of acres of American farmland, eliminating hundreds of thousands of tons of CO2 equivalent in the process.
PostJanuary 30, 2025

MIT spinout Gradiant reduces companies’ water use and waste by billions o...

MIT News
The mission of Gradiant, a firm started by MIT alumni, is to preserve water for generations to come in the face of rising global demand through innovation. Here, a worker inspects a Gradiant water treatment system.
PostJanuary 29, 2025

Smart carbon dioxide removal yields economic and environmental benefits

MIT News
A new MIT study finds that biochar (charcoal produced from plant matter and stored in soil) is a cost-competitive option for removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide removal is expected to play a key role in reducing greenhouse gas emissions in alignment with long-term climate targets.
PostJanuary 24, 2025

How cities are weathering the climate crisis

MIT News
Lawrence Vale is the co-author of the new book, “The Equitably Resilient City,” published by MIT Press.
PostJanuary 23, 2025

What happens after Utah’s coal-fired power plants close?

MIT Climate
a solar plant being installed in front of Huntington Power Plant in Emory County, Utah
PostJanuary 21, 2025

For clean ammonia, MIT engineers propose going underground

MIT News
MIT engineers developed a way to make clean ammonia, without fossil-fuel-powered chemical plants, using the Earth as a geochemical reactor, producing ammonia underground.
PodcastJanuary 15, 2025

Unconventional paths to energy efficiency

MIT Energy Initiative
thumbnail of episode title
PostJanuary 10, 2025

Q&A: Examining American attitudes on global climate policies

MIT News
An MIT team recently published a study on public sentiment regarding climate policy. The co-authors are (left to right) Professor Evan Lieberman, Associate Professor Volha Charnysh, PhD student Jared Kalow, and Erin Walk PhD ’24. “Our research suggests that emphasizing a bit of blaming and shaming is more powerful than more diffuse messages of shared responsibility,” Lieberman explains.
PostNovember 26, 2024

Is there enough land on Earth to fight climate change and feed the world?

MIT News
A study led by MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy researchers shows that there is enough land to support efforts to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius while addressing competing needs for long-term food security and ecosystem health.
PostNovember 22, 2024

A vision for U.S. science success

MIT News
Arati Prabhakar is President Biden’s science advisor and the head of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.

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