Skip to main content
Climate
Search

Main navigation

  • Climate 101
    • What We Know
    • What Can Be Done
    • Climate Primer
  • Explore
    • Explainers
    • Ask MIT Climate
    • Podcast
    • For Educators
  • MIT Action
    • News
    • Events
    • Resources
  • Search
MIT

Main navigation

  • Climate 101
    • What We Know
    • What Can Be Done
    • Climate Primer
  • Explore
    • Explainers
    • Ask MIT Climate
    • Podcast
    • For Educators
  • MIT Action
    • News
    • Events
    • Resources
  • Search
Students gather around a display of a coral reef at an MIT event

Climate News at MIT

The latest climate change research and action happening in and around MIT.
Filter
Topics
  • Adaptation
  • Arctic & Antarctic
  • Arts & Communication
  • Atmosphere
  • Biodiversity
  • Buildings
  • Carbon Capture
  • Carbon Removal
  • Cities & Planning
  • Climate Modeling
  • Education
  • Energy
    • Batteries, Storage & Transmission
    • Electrification
    • Energy Efficiency
    • Fossil Fuels
    • Nuclear & Fusion Energy
    • Renewable Energy
  • Finance & Economics
    • Carbon Pricing
  • Food, Water & Agriculture
  • Forests
  • Geoengineering
  • Government & Policy
    • Advocacy & Activism
    • International Agreements
    • National Security
  • Health & Medicine
  • Humanities & Social Science
    • Climate Justice
  • Industry & Manufacturing
  • MIT Action
  • Oceans
    • Sea Level Rise
  • Transportation
    • Air Travel
    • Alternative Fuels
    • Cars
    • Freight
    • Public Transportation
  • Waste
  • Weather & Natural Disasters
    • Drought
    • Flooding
    • Heatwaves
    • Hurricanes
    • Wildfires
Content type
  • Educator Guide
  • Podcast
  • Post
  • Video
BuildingsFood, Water & AgricultureNational SecurityClear All
PostNovember 19, 2025

How a building creates and defines a region

Department of Urban Studies and Planning MIT
Architecture students Vincent Jackow (left) and Aleks Banaś with the models they constructed in their design studio course.
PostNovember 18, 2025

Ultrasonic device dramatically speeds harvesting of water from the air

MIT News
MIT engineers design an ultrasonic system to “shake” water out of an atmospheric water harvester. The design (two prototypes shown in photo) can recover captured water in minutes rather than hours.
PostNovember 17, 2025

PODCAST: Climate Reveal (Season 1, Episode 4) - Farm to Table

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Podcast: Climate Reveal
PostNovember 13, 2025

From nanoscale to global scale: Advancing MIT’s special initiatives in ma...

MIT News
Left to right: MIT President Emeritus L Rafael Reif, MIT.nano faculty director Professor Vladimir Bulović, and Ray Stata ’57, SM ’58 view a celebration of Robert Noyce’s life and accomplishments on the MIT.nano digital gallery. Made possible through a gift by Stata, MIT.nano’s cleanroom has been named the Robert N. Noyce (1953) Cleanroom.
PostNovember 7, 2025

Giving buildings an “MRI” to make them more energy-efficient and resili...

MIT News
Tarek Rakha PhD ’15, CEO and founder of Lamarr.AI, says her firm’s technology “is like giving a building an MRI using drones, infrared imaging, visible light imaging, and proprietary AI that we developed through computer vision technology, along with large language models for report generation.”
PostNovember 6, 2025

Where climate meets community

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
The Living Climate Futures Lab is made up of faculty and researchers from across MIT. Together, they are exploring the human impact of climate change.
PostOctober 30, 2025

Battery-powered appliances make it easy to switch from gas to electric

MIT News
“We’re making ‘going electric’ like an appliance swap instead of a construction project,” says founder Sam Calisch. Pictured is an example of Copper’s battery-equipped kitchen range.
PostOctober 14, 2025

Engineering next-generation fertilizers

MIT News
A person wearing a white coat inspects tall green plants in a lab.
PostOctober 8, 2025

How to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from ammonia production

MIT Energy Initiative
MIT researchers have proposed an approach for combined blue-green ammonia production that minimizes waste products and, when combined with some other simple upgrades, could reduce the greenhouse emissions from ammonia production by as much as 63 percent, compared to the leading “low-emissions” approach being used today.
PostOctober 7, 2025

Combining agriculture with forestry could accelerate climate progress

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Agroforestry could accelerate climate progress

Pagination

  • Current page1
  • Page2
  • Page3
  • Page4
  • Page5
  • Next page ›
1 - 10 of 514

MIT Climate News in Your Inbox

 
 

MIT Groups Log In

Log In

Footer

  • About
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Contact
MIT Climate Project
MIT
Communicator Award Winner
Communicator Award Winner