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Climate News at MIT

The latest climate change research and action happening in and around MIT.

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PostApril 21, 2022

Given what we know, how do we live now?

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Circular ripples in a pond
PostApril 8, 2022

Global net-zero emissions goals: Challenges and opportunities

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Photo: Deployment of offshore wind at utility scale is one of many strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in alignment with net-zero emissions targets. (Source: Jesse Costa/WBUR)
PostMarch 17, 2022

Setting carbon management in stone

MIT Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
A new proposal aims to bring geologists, chemists, and biologists together to make permanently storing carbon underground workable under different geological conditions.
PostMarch 17, 2022

Q&A: Climate Grand Challenges finalists on accelerating reductions in globa...

MIT News
Faculty leaders of three research teams explain how they are drawing upon geological, biological, chemical, and oceanic processes to develop game-changing techniques for carbon removal, management, and storage.
PostFebruary 25, 2022

MIT entrepreneurs think globally, act locally

MIT News
Left to right: Colonel Arsenio Soto Soto (DR Navy), MechE alumnus Folkers Rojas, MBA candidate Andrés Bisonó León, MechE alumnus Luke Gray, and Professor Alex Slocum at the SOS Carbon full-scale pilot at the Las Calderas Navy base at Bani in the Dominican Republic, in 2019.
PostFebruary 14, 2022

First-ever Climate Grand Challenges recognizes 27 finalists

MIT News
The Climate Grand Challenges competition launched in July 2020 with the goal of mobilizing the entire MIT research community around transformative projects that have the potential to make major advances in solving the big problems that stand in the way of effective global climate response.
PostFebruary 3, 2022

Students dive into research with the MIT Climate and Sustainability Consort...

MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium
MIT undergraduates who participated in MCSC UROPs last fall include: (top row, left to right) Hannah Spilman, Claire Kim, Alfonso Restrepo, Cameron Dougal, and James Santoro; (bottom row, left to right) Tess Buchanan, Kezia Hector, Tamsin Nottage, and Ellie Vaserman.
PostJanuary 10, 2022

A dirt cheap solution? Common clay materials may help curb methane emission...

MIT News
A team of researchers at MIT has come up with a promising approach to controlling methane emissions and removing it from the air, using an inexpensive and abundant type of clay called zeolite. In this image, the zeolite, depicted as the complex structure in the middle, absorbs the methane that passes through it.
PostDecember 20, 2021

3 Questions: Slowing down climate change with plant and soil carbon storage...

MIT Civil and Environmental Engineering
Lush green leafed trees in forest
PostOctober 28, 2021

Arizona Daily Star OpEd: Sen. Sinema, support essential climate measures

MACA - MIT Alumni for Climate Action

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