News + Media

emanuel book
In The News
New York Times | Jan 15, 2013
By Justin Gillis I would guess a few Green readers had the experience, over the holidays, of arguing yet again about ...
energybiz
Commentary
Energy Biz | Jan 14, 2013
A Win for Energy and America By John Reilly THE NEW - STILL DIVIDED - CONGRESS reconvenes this month, and its first order of business is the looming federal deficit. The president made his desires clear in his victory speech: "We want our children to live in an America that isn't burdened by debt...
mercury
In The News
MIT News | Jan 14, 2013
Get the inside scoop and follow LIVE reports from Geneva by twitter and blog.   Ten MIT students are having an experience of a lifetime as they join officials from around the world for the fifth and final meeting to address global controls on mercury – taking place January 13-18 in Geneva,...
mercury
News Release
MIT News | Jan 09, 2013
Harvard, MIT researchers map future trends of mercury and ways to reduce it on eve of international negotiations. International negotiators will come together next week in Geneva, Switzerland for the fifth and final meeting to address global controls on mercury. Ahead of the negotiations,...
dam
News Release
Link to Article | Dec 18, 2012
By: Vicki Ekstrom MIT researchers enhance model to assess the risks of water stress. A conflict over water management has intensified along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers. Downstream states argue water should be released from the Missouri’s upstream reservoirs into the Mississippi to allow...
parson
Recent Event
Harvard Gazette | Dec 12, 2012
By: Alvin Powell, Harvard Staff Writer Benefits, risks of using geoengineering to counter climate change. If they wanted to, nations around the world could release globe-cooling aerosols into the atmosphere or undertake other approaches to battle climate change, an authority on environmental...
nyt
In The News
New York Times | Dec 12, 2012
By: Kate Galbraith AUSTIN, TEXAS — The harm that can be caused by consuming or breathing mercury is well known and terrible. A pregnant woman, eating too much of the wrong kind of fish, risks bearing a child with neurological damage. Adults or children exposed to mercury can experience mood swings...
newyorker
In The News
The New Yorker | Dec 10, 2012
By:Elizabeth Kolbert It’s been almost a century since the British economist Arthur Pigou floated the idea that turned his name into an adjective. In “The Economics of Welfare,” published in 1920, Pigou pointed out that private investments often impose costs on other people. Consider this...
cnn
In The News
CNN Opinion | Dec 03, 2012
By: David Frum Editor's note: David Frum, a CNN contributor, is a contributing editor at Newsweek and The Daily Beast. He is the author of eight books, including a new novel, "Patriots," and his post-election e-book, "Why Romney Lost." Frum was a special assistant to President George W. Bush from...
Student Spotlight
Dec 01, 2012

Yip wants to look into proposed policies, such as an open fuels standard, to help policymakers understand what could go wrong if they do choose to adopt the standard.

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