Study: Volkswagen’s excess emissions will lead to 1,200 premature deaths in Europe
Countries hit hardest by automaker’s emissions scandal include Germany, Poland, France, and Czech Republic.
Countries hit hardest by automaker’s emissions scandal include Germany, Poland, France, and Czech Republic.
TREX program from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering offers undergraduates the opportunity to get out in the field.
New toolset evaluates economic impacts of ozone reduction policies for nine income groups.
Jesse Kroll examines how pollutants change chemically as they waft around the globe.
Marking 25 years of science and policy studies, the MIT Joint Program launches new website showcasing its expanded research portfolio.
MIT researchers are developing mobile torrefaction technology that can convert biomass into clean-burning fuel, unlocking potential income for farmers.
PhD candidate Maher Damak and Professor Moungi Bawendi recognized for advances in engineering and chemistry.
Energy scenarios provide useful decision-support tools for policymakers and investors.
Researchers find no evidence of an overall reduction in the world’s consumption of materials.
Research shows how rebuilding Britain’s Houses of Parliament in the 1800s helped create clean-air laws.
Through warming effects, methane and other gases impact rising seas long after leaving the atmosphere.
Paul Kishimoto, a PhD student in IDSS, probes the future of transportation in China.
Study shows carpooling apps could reduce congestion by a factor of three while still serving the same number of people.
Study finds accounting for year-to-year variability enables more accurate projections of climate change and its impacts.
How an enhanced cap-and-trade system can help the world’s top carbon emitter cut emissions and improve air quality.