Why a new gas pipeline into New England may (or may not) lower energy bills
Looming over the debate over a new gas pipeline is the cost of continuing to emit planet-warming emissions.
Looming over the debate over a new gas pipeline is the cost of continuing to emit planet-warming emissions.
Several attendees at this year's Federal Reserve Jackson Hole Economic Symposium said the problem with high indebtedness is not a threshold, but that it leaves governments in a precarious posi
Two MIT Sloan academics have been named to the shortlist for the Thinkers50 Awards. Professor
Watch recordings of past MBAn events hosted by the Admissions team.
In an excerpt from their new book "There's Got to Be a Better Way: How to Deliver Results and Get Rid of the Stuff That Gets in the Way of Real Work," professor
Research from CEEPR, including Faculty Director Christopher Knittel and post-doc Juan Senga, highlights the connection between data centers, emissions, and grid stability.
MIT Sloan Professor Catherine Wolfram is interviewed about a proposed international climate coalition focused on taxing carbon. This work is part of the Harvard-MIT Global Climate Policy Project.
MIT Climate Policy Center Faculty Director Christopher Knittel is quoted on how a new gas pipeline might impact household energy costs.
"It seems that FHFA pricing changes were well considered."
"The duration gap provides information that even the most astute market analysts would not be able to infer from currently mandated disclosures."