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Climate News at MIT

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ElectrificationWasteClear All
PostApril 11, 2025

The Science of the City: Composting, the fertile solution to food waste

MIT Climate
Two people stand in front of a large machine at a compost processing facility in Maryland.
PostMarch 17, 2025

The Science of the City: A landfill full of food is a recipe for methane

MIT Climate
Earthmoving equipment on a landfill site
PostFebruary 19, 2025

Reducing carbon emissions from residential heating: A pathway forward

MIT Energy Initiative
A modeling study by an MIT team has shown that electrifying residential heating can be a substantial step toward reducing carbon emissions, as well as costs, over the combined electricity and natural gas sectors. Here, the team poses beside a high-efficiency electric heat pump system that provides heating to the home, replacing the natural gas-fired furnace. Left to right: Audun Botterud, Saurabh Amin, Rahman Khorramfar, Morgan Santoni-Colvin, and Leslie Norford. Not pictured: Dharik Mallapragada.
PostJanuary 27, 2025

Report Published on Policy Options for Improving Grid Reliability and Reduc...

MIT Climate Policy Center
Image of electricity transmission towers
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.
PostDecember 4, 2024

A new catalyst can turn methane into something useful

MIT News
MIT chemical engineers designed a two-part catalyst that can convert methane gas to useful products. The catalyst consists of iron-modified aluminum silicate plus an enzyme called alcohol oxidase (enzyme not pictured).
PostNovember 26, 2024

Decarbonizing heavy industry with thermal batteries

MIT News
The electrically conductive firebricks could help hard-to-decarbonize sectors utilize renewable energy for the first time.
PodcastNovember 25, 2024

Decarbonizing energy: The government’s role

MIT Energy Initiative
PostNovember 22, 2024

Catherine Wolfram: High-energy scholar

MIT News
“One of the things that pleasantly surprised me is how tight-knit and friendly the MIT faculty all are,” says Catherine Wolfram.
PostNovember 21, 2024

A nonflammable battery to power a safer, decarbonized future

MIT News
Alsym has been manufacturing prototypes at a small facility in Woburn, Massachusetts for the last two years. Pictured is a view of the Alsym facility.

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