Sustainability Lunch Series
We bring practitioners, researchers and the MIT community together to answer questions students may have as they pursue a career in sustainability.
We bring practitioners, researchers and the MIT community together to answer questions students may have as they pursue a career in sustainability.
Our community is tethered by our reliance on our planet — and each other. As we celebrate a decade of our Sustainability Certificate, we're proud to share these stories of leaders taking action.
The best sustainability strategies start by recognizing what it is you do well, where you have influence, and how you can use your core strengths to drive positive change, says Patrick Flynn (MBA '12)
Kerry Bowie (MBA '06) is building a coalition of leaders to diversify the green space.
The majority of Americans – 80% in fact – cannot install a solar rooftop system. Sandhya Murali is changing that.
"Without execution, a strategy of sustainability remains a plan written on a piece of paper" says professor Karen Zheng
To promote his company's sustainability story, which they hadn’t yet quantified, Ed Fish (MBA '15) turned to a team of S-Lab students for help.
Sarah Day Kalloch has dedicated her career to connecting public and private sector leaders with front line workers to build better businesses.
Sarah Nolet has used the skills, experiences, and networks she gained at MIT and in the Sustainability Certificate to help build the sustainable agtech industry in Australia.
For Rich Wilner, it all started with John Sterman telling his EMBA class that we use the equivalent of 1.8 Earth resources every single year.