U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
New England Regional Office
August 22, 2012
Contact: David Deegan, (617)
918-1017New England Regional Office
August 22, 2012
MIT
Researchers Awarded $750,000 Grant to Study Climate Change
Effects
(Boston, Mass. – Aug. 22, 2012) – The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology has been awarded $749,931 by the US
Environmental Protection Agency to examine the ability of models to represent
the presence of extreme air pollution and the weather conditions that are
associated with it.
This grant was one of 14 awarded by EPA to
universities across the nation for a total of $9 million to fund research on
technologies that can help the public and government agencies predict and
prepare for the effect extreme weather triggered by climate change may have on
the nation’s air and water quality.
The project at MIT, based in Cambridge, Mass.,
will use advanced statistical techniques to identify the drivers and occurrence
of historical and future extreme air quality events in the United States from
observations and models.
“We need to know how changes in weather and
extreme weather events will affect the quality of our air and water,” said Curt
Spalding, regional administrator of EPA’s New England office. “Grants like the
one EPA awarded to MIT furthers research that can help us understand the impact
of such weather on our natural resources as well as our built environment. In
turn, this information can help us take steps to reduce the harmful impact on
our communities brought by extreme weather events.”
The project involves a collaboration of
atmospheric scientists at MIT and the National Center for Atmospheric Research
with statisticians at Colorado State University and North Carolina State
University.
"We are excited that in this project we are
bringing together statisticians who specialize in thinking about extreme events
with atmospheric scientists who are concerned with air quality issues,” said
project leader Colette Heald at MIT. “It's a great team to tackle this problem
and we are looking forward to learning more about the connections between
extreme air quality and extreme weather."
The other 13 grants were awarded to: Public
Policy Institute of California, Mississippi State University, Ohio State
University, Oregon State University, University of Washington, University of
South Florida (two grants), Michigan State University, Michigan Technological
University, University of Texas at Austin, Georgia Institute of Technology,
Columbia University, and Cornell University.
More information on these EPA research grants
(http://www.epa.gov/ncer/xevents).
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