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Climate News at MIT

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Energy EfficiencyAdvocacy & ActivismClear All
PostAugust 9, 2024

New tool empowers pavement life-cycle decision-making while reducing data c...

MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub
Despite their importance and impact, there are often scarce data for evaluating the environmental impact of roads across their whole life cycle, from producing raw materials through demolition. The MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub’s streamlined framework reduces the overall data collection burden by up to 85 percent.
PostAugust 8, 2024

Going Dutch on climate

MIT Energy Initiative
As part of a MITEI-sponsored field trip to the Netherlands to experience the country’s approach to sustainable energy, MIT students received a tour of EnTranCe, a facility dedicated to researching hydrogen usage within the energy grid, at Hanze University in Groningen.
PostJuly 16, 2024

AI method radically speeds predictions of materials’ thermal properties

MIT News
A new method could help models predict a material's thermal properties, such as by revealing the dynamics of atoms in crystals, as illustrated here.
PostJuly 8, 2024

“They can see themselves shaping the world they live in”

MIT Open Learning
Langston Reid, Vishnu Bharath, and Simon Zall (left to right) discuss their project at the 2024 Day of AI global celebration at the Museum of Science. Day of AI is a free, hands-on curriculum developed by the MIT Responsible AI for Social Empowerment and Education (RAISE) initiative.
PostJune 26, 2024

Startup aims to transform the power grid with superconducting transmission ...

MIT News
“We can deploy much higher power levels at much lower voltage,” Tim Heidel says.
PostJune 25, 2024

EU and US Approaches to Address Energy Poverty

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
European plug against a backdrop of US dollars
PodcastJune 6, 2024

E10: 2°C: the story of the global climate goal

TILclimate Podcast
TILclimate logo
PostApril 25, 2024

Two MIT teams selected for NSF sustainable materials grants

MIT News
Two MIT-led teams received funding from the National Science Foundation to investigate quantum topological materials and sustainable microchip production.
PostApril 4, 2024

The heat is on: Accelerating climate action at a time of record-breaking te...

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
MIT Global Change Forum panel on climate communications
PostApril 4, 2024

Propelling atomically layered magnets toward green computers

MIT News
The flow of electrical current in the bottom crystalline slab (representing WTe2) breaks a mirror symmetry (shattered glass), while the material itself breaks the other mirror symmetry (cracked glass). The resulting spin current has vertical polarization that switches the magnetic state of the top 2D ferromagnet.

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