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Climate News at MIT

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WasteClear All
PostDecember 13, 2024

In a unique research collaboration, students make the case for less e-waste...

MIT News
Left to right: Anastasia Duncan, Chris Rabe, and Jasmin Liu stand at the loading dock of MIT's Stata Center, where students and faculty go "crufting." Rabe facilitated an interdisciplinary working group of undergraduate and graduate students known as SERC Scholars to co-author a case study on the electronic hardware waste life cycle and climate justice.
PostOctober 8, 2024

Utah has the last conventional uranium mill in the country. What does it do...

MIT Climate
Utah has the last conventional uranium mill in the country. What does it do?
PostDecember 12, 2023

MIT campus goals in food, water, waste support decarbonization efforts

MIT Office of Sustainability
The 2030 Impact Goals for the MIT campus will help inform campus decarbonization efforts.
PostApril 21, 2023

Volunteer committee helps the MIT community live and work sustainably

MIT News
The MIT Working Green Committee is made up of support staff volunteers committed to making MIT more environmentally friendly. The committee hosts regular Choose to Reuse events to give MIT’s community members a chance to donate unwanted items — or find free things that just might become prized possessions.
PostApril 21, 2022

Given what we know, how do we live now?

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Circular ripples in a pond
PostFebruary 25, 2022

Progress toward a sustainable campus food system

MIT Office of Sustainability
The Launchpad, a nonprofit food business incubator created in partnership with CommonWealth Kitchen (CWK), debuted this fall in the second-floor Lobdell Food Court.
PostFebruary 14, 2022

Resilience in Action: 2021 Sustainability Reports showcase accomplishments

MIT Office of Sustainability
MITOS Annual Report & GHG Brochure Covers
PostNovember 3, 2021

Unchecked growth of industrial animal farms spurs long fight for environmen...

MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative
An aerial view of an industrial hog farm and lagoons filled with waste in eastern North Carolina.
PostNovember 3, 2021

Decades of legal battles over pollution by industrial hog farms haven’t c...

MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative
Screenshot from the Bladen County Tax Assessor website shows two parcels of land: One 261 acre parcel was purchased by Kinlaw Farms LLC in 1998, the other 34 acre plot (outlined in blue) was purchased by Billy Kinlaw in 1994.
PostSeptember 22, 2021

Study: Global cancer risk from burning organic matter comes from unregulate...

MIT News
Whenever organic matter is burned, such as in a wildfire, a power plant, a car’s exhaust, or in daily cooking, the combustion releases polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) — a class of pollutants that is known to cause lung cancer.

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