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Students gather around a display of a coral reef at an MIT event

Climate News at MIT

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Advocacy & ActivismOceansClear All
PostMay 11, 2023

Like ancient mariners, ancestors of Prochlorococcus microbes rode out to se...

MIT News
New research suggests the Prochlorococcus microbe’s ancient coastal ancestors colonized the ocean by rafting out on chitin particles.
PostMay 8, 2023

US and UAE governments highlight early warning system for climate resilienc...

MIT News
International nonprofit BRAC is working with farmers to pilot salinity-resilient sunflower seeds for oil production in southwestern Bangladesh, in fields that have been fallow during one of the growing seasons due to salinity intrusion.
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 13, 2023

MIT PhD students honored for their work to solve critical issues in water a...

MIT News
2023 J-WAFS Fellows Gokul Sampath (left) and Jie Yun
PostApril 11, 2023

Responding to Ukraine’s “ocean of suffering”

MIT Energy Initiative
Ian Miller SM ’18 (left) with his colleague Evan Platt SM ’20 in Kyiv's Mykhailivs'ka Square. Alongside Ukrainians, they co-founded Zero Line, a nonprofit delivering medical aid, vehicles, and equipment to Ukrainians on the front lines.
PostJanuary 5, 2023

New MIT internships expand research opportunities in Africa

MIT News
Researchers from the State University of Zanzibar and MIT students Mel Isidor (third from left) and Rajan Hoyle (far left) enjoy a field visit to Uzi Island, Zanzibar, to learn about seaweed farming.
PodcastDecember 15, 2022

E7: TIL about winter storms

TILclimate Podcast
PostNovember 3, 2022

Ocean microbes get their diet through a surprising mix of sources, study fi...

MIT News
Long thought to rely solely on photosynthesis, the microbe Prochlorococcus may get as much as one-third of its carbon through a second strategy: consuming the dissolved remains of other dead microbes.
PostOctober 3, 2022

Small eddies play a big role in feeding ocean microbes

MIT News
This video still of the North Pacific Ocean shows phosphate nutrient concentrations at 500 meters below the ocean surface. The swirls represent small eddies transporting phosphate from the nutrient-rich equator (lighter colors), northward toward the nutrient-depleted subtropics (darker colors).
PostSeptember 21, 2022

Ocean scientists measure sediment plume stirred up by deep-sea-mining vehic...

MIT News
The Launch and Recovery System deploying the Patania II pre-prototype collector vehicle from the surface operations vessel MV Normand Energy.

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