I will discuss a 2-dimensional model of random walk in random environment known as line model. The environment is described by two independent families of i.i.d. random variables dictating rates of jumps in vertical, respectively horizontal directions, and whose values are constant along vertical, respect. horizontal lines. When jump rates are heavy-tailed in one of the directions, the random walk becomes superdiffusive in that direction, with an explicit scaling limit written as a two-dimensional Brownian motion time-changed (in one of the components) by a process introduced by Kesten and Spitzer in 1979. I will present ideas of the proof of this result, which relies on appropriate time-change arguments. In the case of a fully degenerate environment, I will present a sufficient condition for non-explosion of the process (which is also believed to be sharp), as well as conjectures on the associated scaling limit.
This is based on joint work with J.-D. Deuschel (TU Berlin).