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Climate News at MIT

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ElectrificationFood, Water & AgricultureClear All
PostNovember 8, 2024

Startup turns mining waste into critical metals for the U.S.

MIT News
"Being able to make your own materials domestically means that you're not at the behest of a foreign monopoly," says co-founder Tomás Villalón ’14, pictured.
PostNovember 1, 2024

Making agriculture more resilient to climate change

MIT News
PostOctober 2, 2024

Translating MIT research into real-world results

MIT News
MIT researchers who have received J-WAFS Solutions grants are taking their water and food technologies from the lab and implementing them in the real world, creating positive impacts for communities around the globe.
PostOctober 2, 2024

Choosing Climate Policies in a Second-best World with Incomplete Markets

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
PostSeptember 5, 2024

Wind and solar power can generate vital profits for Texas’ dwindling farm...

MIT Climate
sheep.jpg
PostAugust 20, 2024

Creating connection with science communication

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
“Photography was a door into science journalism,” Graduate Program in Science Writing student Sophie Hartley notes. “It lets you capture the raw beauty of a moment and return to it later.”
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 5, 2024

Reducing carbon emissions from long-haul trucks

MIT Energy Initiative
Based on a series of analytical studies, MIT chemical engineers have come up with an idea that would enable long-haul trucks to use clean-burning hydrogen in place of diesel fuel, thereby reducing their carbon emissions. Left to right: Sayandeep Biswas, William Green, and Kariana Moreno Sader are now building an experiment to test and fine-tune equipment key to their promising approach.
PostMay 28, 2024

Q&A: The power of tiny gardens and their role in addressing climate change

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Kate Brown is the Thomas M. Siebel Distinguished Professor in History of Science in the MIT Program in Science, Technology, and Society.
PostMay 22, 2024

Making steel with electricity

MIT News
MIT spinout Boston Metal is commercializing a new method for making steel and other metals that could clean up the highly polluting industry. “All of the fundamental studies and the initial technologies came out of MIT,” Guillaume Lambotte says.

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