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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.

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PostMay 14, 2025

Drug injection device wins MIT $100K Competition

MIT News
In addition to the $100,000 grand prize awarded to CoFlo, a $50,000 second-place prize was awarded to Haven, a $5,000 third-place prize to Aorta Scope, and a $5,000 audience choice award to Flood Dynamics.
PostApril 26, 2025

As climate change pushes dry weather east, striking changes are coming to D...

MIT Climate
A truck and house destroyed by the Smokehouse Creek Fire are seen, Friday, March 1, 2024, in Stinnett, Texas. The wildfire became the largest in state history at over one million acres. Climatologists believe wildfires will become more common as global temperatures warm
PostApril 11, 2025

Hundred-year storm tides will occur every few decades in Bangladesh, scient...

MIT News
For the coastal country of Bangladesh, once-in-a-century storm tides could strike every 10 years — or more often — by the end of the century, scientists report. In this photo, a Bangladeshi woman and child walk over the top of a sandbag embankment in Khulna on May 4, 2019.
PostApril 4, 2025

Lincoln Laboratory honored for technology transfer of hurricane-tracking sa...

MIT News
Two small satellites
PodcastMarch 20, 2025

E3: Did climate change do that?

TILclimate Podcast
TILclimate logo
PostFebruary 19, 2025

Projecting and reducing the global economic impacts of climate change

MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy
Photo: Los Angeles wildfires, January 2025 (Source: City of Irvine, California)
PostJanuary 27, 2025

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

MIT Climate Policy Center
Image of electricity transmission towers
PostDecember 6, 2024

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

MIT News
PostDecember 2, 2024

Q&A: Transforming research through global collaborations

MIT News
"The success of this project would not have been possible without this specific international collaboration," says Associate Professor Josephine Carstensen (left). "A GSF-supported visit by Argentinian researchers last year made it possible for them to interact not just with my group, but with students and faculty across EAPS," says Professor David McGee (right).
PostNovember 25, 2024

New AI tool generates realistic satellite images of future flooding

MIT News
A generative AI model visualizes how floods in Texas would look like in satellite imagery. The original photo is on the left, and the AI generated image is in on the right.

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