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Weather & Natural DisastersFood, Water & AgricultureClear All
PostMarch 19, 2021

Resilient Decarbonization for the United States

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
PostMarch 10, 2021

3 Questions: Richard Samuels on Japan’s 3.11 triple disaster and its impa...

MIT News
“Social science teaches that great and unexpected shocks can stimulate great and unexpected social and political change,” says Professor Richard Samuels, director of the Center for International Studies. “But what I found was that even an event as cataclysmic as 3.11 did not change the policy preferences of Japan’s leaders.”
PostMarch 10, 2021

Assessing and managing risks amid global and regional change

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Sergey Paltsev
PostMarch 8, 2021

As the Texas power crisis shows, our infrastructure is vulnerable to extrem...

MIT Technology Review
Texans waiting in the rain
PostFebruary 22, 2021

EAPS Professor Susan Solomon helped set the Doomsday Clock

MIT Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
PostFebruary 22, 2021

Remote PKG Fellowships for summer

MIT PKG Center
PostFebruary 16, 2021

Bill Gates: Rich nations should shift entirely to synthetic beef

MIT Technology Review
PostFebruary 10, 2021

Brewing up a dirty-water remedy (and more) with kombucha-inspired biosensor...

Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS)
Biological Engineering graduate student Zijay Tang demonstrates the durability of Syn-SCOBY, a kombucha-inspired living membrane.
PostFebruary 2, 2021

On Environmental Economics: Commentary by Clare Balboni

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Researcher looking at monitors with environmental economics data.
PostJanuary 20, 2021

Could lab-grown plant tissue ease the environmental toll of logging and agr...

MIT News
MIT researchers have proposed a method to grow plant-based materials, like wood and fiber, and have demonstrated the concept by growing a culture of wood-like cells from zinnia leaves, pictured.

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