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Climate News at MIT

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OceansRenewable EnergyClear All
PostMarch 12, 2025

Making solar projects cheaper and faster with portable factories

MIT News
Prototypes of machines from Charge Robotics’ autonomously assemble sections of a solar farm as part of a pilot project in partnership with SOLV Energy.
PostFebruary 13, 2025

Mission: Climate

MIT Spectrum
Storm clouds hover over a green field.
PostFebruary 6, 2025

Seeking climate connections among the oceans’ smallest organisms

MIT News
By combining measurements that he takes in the ocean with experiments in his MIT lab, Andrew Babbin is working to understand the connections between microbes and nitrogen in the ocean.
PostJanuary 27, 2025

Report Published on Policy Options for Improving Grid Reliability and Reduc...

MIT Climate Policy Center
Image of electricity transmission towers
PostJanuary 24, 2025

A platform to expedite clean energy projects

MIT News
Station A’s platform helps real estate owners and businesses analyze properties to calculate returns on decarbonization projects, create detailed project listings, and more.
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 3, 2025

An abundant phytoplankton feeds a global network of marine microbes

MIT News
Prochlorococcus tend to shed their molecular baggage at night. For a microbe called SAR11, the researchers found that the nighttime snack acts as a relaxant of sorts.
PostDecember 20, 2024

In Sweden, broad consensus on climate action spurs an energy transition in ...

MIT Climate
The main debate in Sweden is not whether to build more zero-carbon energy sources, but rather, which ones.
PostDecember 18, 2024

Surface-based sonar system could rapidly map the ocean floor at high resolu...

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Left to right: Stephen Murray, Jason Valenzano, David Kindler, Paul Ryu, and Andrew March deploy their 8 m × 8 m sonar array test bed, held together by a metal frame, in Boston Harbor for sea tests.
PostDecember 13, 2024

What will it take for the American steel industry to go ‘fossil-free’?

MIT Climate
At HYBRIT's fossil-free steel plant in Luleå, Sweden, hydrogen made with renewable electricity turns reddish iron ore pellets, left, into grey pellets of sponge iron, which are ready to be melted down and made into steel.

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