Q&A: More-sustainable concrete with machine learning
MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab researchers aim to design concrete mixtures that use AI to shrink environmental footprint and cost, while recycling byproducts and increasing performance.
MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab researchers aim to design concrete mixtures that use AI to shrink environmental footprint and cost, while recycling byproducts and increasing performance.
Discussion at MIT explores ways the music industry can help in the battle to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions.
Announced at the UN Climate Change Conference, the initiative aims to make food systems more resilient and sustainable by better connecting research to practice.
Researchers argue the plant could provide multiple benefits for California, including desalinated water and clean hydrogen fuel.
PhD candidate Charlene Xia is developing a low-cost system to monitor the microbiome of seaweed farms and identify diseases before they spread.
Researchers affiliated with the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub find that paving material selection could mitigate extreme heat and greenhouse gas emissions.
An MIT study gauges the pace of shifting to battery power.
“This is the key, the linchpin that will set a lot of things in the right direction,” says the mechanical engineering professor.
Fiore brings a breadth of expertise in climate science, atmospheric chemistry, and air pollution to MIT.
2021 Global Change Outlook from the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change shows how more aggressive policies can sharply reduce climate risk.
MIT professor describes her path to the Institute, her work on ozone depletion, and her insights on the state of climate policy.
The company’s software, based on work by co-founder and Professor Ed Crawley, expedites the process of home energy accreditation.
Study finds Earth’s frozen surfaces became less susceptible to thawing, potentially locking in more carbon than expected.
Engagement with political, community leaders must be a key part of forthcoming climate action plan, MIT climate leaders say.
Climate projections could be off by five years, researchers find.