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What business needs to know about carbon border adjustments
Climate economist Catherine Wolfram explains how the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism aims to level the playing field among trading partners.
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The climate continues to change, and it’s changed pretty dramatically in the last 15 years. I don’t think we should draw too many conclusions about what’s possible.
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What business needs to know about carbon border adjustments
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Climate economist Catherine Wolfram explains how the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism aims to level the playing field among trading partners.
The relationship between machine learning and climate change
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Machine learning can drive climate action initiatives, but its widespread use could have negative implications, according to Climate Change AI’s Priya Donti.
3 things to know about the next 4 years of US energy
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Climate policy expert Christopher Knittel handicaps the likelihood of tariffs, cuts to IRA subsidies, and a carbon tax under the new administration.
AI uses lots of data center energy — but there are solutions
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AI workloads have sent data center emissions skyrocketing. An MIT expert details ways to reduce energy use and promote sustainable AI.
Our People, Our Impact
Our students and alumni bring climate solutions from the classroom into the world.
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Weixiang Wang
Sloan Fellows MBA '18
Chief Sustainability Officer Ministry of Sustainability & Environment, Singapore
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Hind AlHashem
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Degree ProgramMBA '25
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At a glanceHind aspires to enable positive change in the world, and hopes to bridge the gap between energy and sustainability, “ensuring both align through the energy transition.”

Hibah Khan
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Degree ProgramMBA '25

Aateeb Khan
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Degree ProgramMBA '25

Nisha Patel
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Degree ProgramMBA '25

Trace Allen
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Degree ProgramMBA/MCP '24

Alexa Katz
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Degree ProgramMBA '24
MIT Sloan Students in Action: Spotlight on the Sustainability Summit
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Meet Varun Gupta MBA ’25 and Victoria Eugenia Tostado Bringas SFMBA ’24 Varun Gupta, MBA ’25, and Victoria Eugenia Tostado Bringas, SFMBA ’24, co-directed sponsorships for the 2024 MIT Sustainability Summit, an annual student-run event that has grown to include hundreds of attendees ranging from professionals, academics, and students.
In the News
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The Hill
Professor Catherine Wolfram and co-author write: "The entrenched view that the United States will never support a carbon price is misguided. 2025 will be a big year for Congress to tackle longstanding fiscal issues and further climate policy efforts. Before this can happen, politicians need to hear timely arguments backed by up-to-date evidence."
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Financial Times
In new research, professor Roberto Rigobon, research scientist Florian Berg, and co-author used data from analytics firm Clarity AI to assess the carbon emissions of companies that did and didn't have SBTi-approved targets in place. The results were striking. Companies that set SBTi targets, but didn't obtain assurance on their climate reports, performed no better on emissions reduction than non-SBTi signatories.
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Fast Company
"The impact on jobs of the energy transition is not just going to be where oil and natural gas are drilled, it's going to be all the way up and down the value chain of things we make in the U.S.," said professor Christopher Knittel, coauthor of a research paper on the analysis published today.
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The Hill
Professor Christopher Knittel and co-author write: "Our research paper, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, provides new economy-wide data on where employment in the United States is most vulnerable to the economic pressures of the energy transition. We find that the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act fails to effectively support many parts of the country where employment is at risk."
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CNN
"The target here is to produce electricity cheaper than coal and gas plants," senior lecturer John Parsons said. These fossil fuel plants are "terribly simple and cheap to run — they're just dirty," he added.
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The Boston Globe
John Sterman, a professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management with a focus in sustainability, achieved the holy grail of net zero eight years ago. His 1920s Lexington home was due for an update, but instead of just "upgrading and renovating," Sterman decided the "incremental cost of going deeper and doing a retrofit" was the right move.
The Climate Project at MIT
The goal of the Climate Project at MIT is for MIT to become, within the next decade, one of the world’s most prolific and collaborative sources of technological, behavioral, and policy solutions for the global climate challenge. We'll know we have succeed only if, in 10 years, we have changed the expected trajectory of global climate outcomes for the better.