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Climate News at MIT

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WasteWeather & Natural DisastersClear All
PostSeptember 30, 2024

Where flood policy helps most — and where it could do more

MIT News
Hurricane Debby flooded homes and cars in Sarasota, Florida in August 2024.
PostSeptember 24, 2024

Study evaluates impacts of summer heat in U.S. prison environments

MIT News
“In terms of environmental hazards, extreme heat causes some of the most acute impacts for incarcerated people,” says Ufuoma Ovienmhada.
PostAugust 6, 2024

New substrate material for flexible electronics could help combat e-waste

MIT News
A new kind of flexible substrate material developed at MIT, the University of Utah, and Meta could help combat e-waste.
PostJuly 25, 2024

A recipe for zero-emissions fuel: Soda cans, seawater, and caffeine

MIT News
MIT engineers Aly Kombargi (left) and Niko Tsakiris (right) work on a new hydrogen reactor, designed to produce hydrogen gas by mixing aluminum pellets with seawater.
PostJuly 17, 2024

Collaborative effort supports an MIT resilient to the impacts of extreme he...

MIT Office of Sustainability
A heat sensor captures data in the Kendall/MIT Open Space.
PostJuly 3, 2024

How to increase the rate of plastics recycling

MIT News
Researchers say this study is the first to look in detail at the interplay between public policies and the end-to-end realities of the packaging production and recycling market.
PostMay 8, 2024

Study: Heavy snowfall and rain may contribute to some earthquakes

MIT News
Episodes of heavy snowfall and rain likely contributed to a swarm of earthquakes over the past several years in northern Japan, MIT researchers find. Their study is the first to show climate conditions could initiate some quakes. Pictured is a scene from Japan’s Noto Peninsula.
PostMay 3, 2024

HPI-MIT design research collaboration creates powerful teams

MIT News
Interdisciplinary teams from MIT and HPI are encouraged to develop and submit proposals for ambitious projects offering impactful solutions to the world’s problems as part of the Designing for Sustainability research program.
PostApril 29, 2024

An AI dataset carves new paths to tornado detection

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Mark Veillette (left) and James Kurdzo compiled TorNet, an open-source dataset containing thousands of radar images depicting tornadoes and other severe storms. The dataset can serve as a benchmark for researchers to develop tornado-detecting AI algorithms.
PostApril 18, 2024

Using deep learning to image the Earth’s planetary boundary layer

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
This schematic of the planetary boundary layer (red line) shows exchanges of moisture and movement of aerosols that occur between the Earth's surface and this lowest level of the atmosphere. Lincoln Laboratory researchers are using deep learning techniques to learn more about PBL features, important for weather and climate studies.

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