Power when the sun doesn’t shine
With batteries based on iron and air, Form Energy leverages MIT research to incorporate renewables into the grid.
With batteries based on iron and air, Form Energy leverages MIT research to incorporate renewables into the grid.
2023 Global Change Outlook from the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change quantifies benefits of policies that cap global warming at 1.5 C.
Antora Energy, co-founded by David Bierman SM ’14, PhD ’17, is commercializing a thermal battery that lets manufacturers use renewable energy around the clock.
MIT Sloan Professor Andy Sun works to improve the electricity grid so it can better use renewable energy.
Made of cement, carbon black, and water, the device could provide cheap and scalable energy storage for renewable energy sources.
A variety of recent events highlighted efforts by faculty, staff, and students to make a difference today.
At MIT, the Massachusetts state senator describes the commonwealth’s progress on tackling global warming, remains optimistic despite short-term delays.
The MIT Energy Initiative’s Spring Symposium highlights the vast potential of offshore turbines in decarbonizing the grid.
With an eye toward the war in Ukraine and other international issues, the student-run conference brought together energy leaders from around the world.
Principal Research Scientist Audun Botterud tackles a range of cross-cutting problems — from energy market interactions to designing batteries — to get closer to a decarbonized power grid.
The MIT assistant professor works to get more electricity out of renewable energy systems.
Health benefits of using wind energy instead of fossil fuels could quadruple if the most polluting power plants are selected for dialing down, new study finds.
MIT Conference on Mining, Environment, and Society convenes academics, industry, policymakers, and NGOs to discuss challenges of supplying the materials for clean energy.
New position paper calls for getting stakeholders involved in wind power projects from the start.
MIT researchers find that changing the pH of a system solves a decades-old problem.