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Climate News at MIT

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Energy EfficiencyHealth & MedicineClear All
PostMarch 21, 2025

Reengineering the global food system for a healthier planet

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Optimizing dietary choices for environmental and human health
PostFebruary 19, 2025

Reducing carbon emissions from residential heating: A pathway forward

MIT Energy Initiative
A modeling study by an MIT team has shown that electrifying residential heating can be a substantial step toward reducing carbon emissions, as well as costs, over the combined electricity and natural gas sectors. Here, the team poses beside a high-efficiency electric heat pump system that provides heating to the home, replacing the natural gas-fired furnace. Left to right: Audun Botterud, Saurabh Amin, Rahman Khorramfar, Morgan Santoni-Colvin, and Leslie Norford. Not pictured: Dharik Mallapragada.
PostFebruary 11, 2025

Creating smart buildings with privacy-first sensors

MIT News
Butlr uses insights from low-resolution thermal cameras and an analytics platform to make buildings more efficient and safe.
PostJanuary 21, 2025

The multifaceted challenge of powering AI

MIT Energy Initiative
There are now over 5,000 data centers in the United States, like this one in northern Virginia, and new ones are being built every day.
PostJanuary 17, 2025

Explained: Generative AI’s environmental impact

MIT News
MIT News explores the environmental and sustainability implications of generative AI technologies and applications.
PostJanuary 13, 2025

Q&A: The climate impact of generative AI

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Vijay Gadepally, a senior staff member in the Lincoln Laboratory Supercomputing Center, discusses steps the research community can take to help mitigate the environmental impact of generative AI.
PostJanuary 13, 2025

Study shows how households can cut energy costs

MIT News
Giving people better data about their energy use, plus some coaching, can help them substantially reduce their consumption and costs, according to a study by MIT researchers in Amsterdam.
PostDecember 6, 2024

So you want to build a solar or wind farm? Here’s how to decide where.

MIT News
PostNovember 13, 2024

MIT engineers make converting CO2 into useful products more practical

MIT News
A conceptual schematic of the new woven electrode design. Researchers wove a series of conductive copper wires (the brown-orange pipe) through a very thin membrane to reach the catalyst.
PostNovember 4, 2024

Nanoscale transistors could enable more efficient electronics

MIT News
Nanoscale 3D transistors made from ultrathin semiconductor materials can operate more efficiently than silicon-based devices, leveraging quantum mechanical properties to potentially enable ultra-low-power AI applications.

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