Today (2017 C.E. - 2025 C.E.)

Naloxone kit and opioid awareness materials for an article about fentanyl overdose deaths

Fentanyl overdose deaths in the U.S. fall by a third in a historic reversal

Fentanyl overdose deaths dropped by roughly 35 percent in 2024, marking the steepest single-year decline in the history of the opioid epidemic. Provisional CDC data shows total drug overdose deaths falling from a peak of around 112,000 in 2023 to an estimated 80,000 in 2024, with synthetic opioids driving most of the decrease. The reversal reflects years of overlapping efforts, including expanded naloxone access, removal of federal barriers to buprenorphine prescribing, and sustained harm reduction investment. Tens of thousands of Americans are alive today who would not have been under the prior trajectory.

A bison herd roaming open Montana grassland for an article about American Prairie Reserve wildlife corridors — 13 words.

American Prairie Reserve removes 100 miles of fence to restore Great Plains wildlife corridors

Great Plains rewilding reaches a landmark milestone as American Prairie Reserve removes 100 miles of fencing from its Montana landholdings, reopening ancient migration routes for bison, pronghorn, elk, and other species. The project is the largest voluntary fence removal initiative on private land in U.S. history. With less than 2% of the Great Plains under formal conservation protection, restoring wildlife corridors addresses one of North America’s most fragmented and overlooked ecosystems. The reserve’s bison herd has grown to over 800 animals and can now roam native grassland at a scale unseen for generations.

Industrial pipes and infrastructure at a coastal energy facility for an article about carbon capture and storage

China sets a world record sustaining fusion plasma for 17 minutes

China fusion plasma record: Scientists have sustained superheated fusion plasma for more than 17 minutes inside an experimental reactor, the longest confinement time ever recorded at that temperature. China’s EAST tokamak held plasma at 100 million degrees Celsius for 1,066 seconds, more than doubling its own previous record. This matters because sustained plasma confinement is one of fusion energy’s hardest engineering challenges, and solving it brings humanity closer to clean, near-limitless power. Fusion produces no carbon emissions and uses hydrogen isotopes from seawater as fuel, making this milestone genuinely significant for the global energy future.

Aerial view of the Faroe Islands coastline for an article about Faroe Islands abortion rights

Faroe Islands legalizes abortion in a landmark vote for women’s rights

Faroe Islands abortion rights became legal for the first time in 2024, when the Løgting voted to end one of Western Europe’s last near-total bans on the procedure. For decades, residents seeking abortions were forced to travel to Denmark at significant personal expense, a burden that fell hardest on those with the least financial means. The landmark vote means people on the remote North Atlantic archipelago can now access abortion services locally, closing a longstanding gap in healthcare equity. The Faroe Islands joins the rest of Northern Europe in formally enshrining reproductive rights in law.

A greater one-horned rhinoceros grazing in tall grassland for an article about India rhino poaching prevention at Kaziranga.

India’s rhino stronghold records zero poaching cases in 2025 C.E.

Kaziranga National Park recorded zero rhino poaching incidents throughout 2025, the first clean year in the park’s modern conservation history. The Assam protected area shelters more than 2,600 greater one-horned rhinoceroses, roughly 70 percent of the species’ entire global population. The milestone reflects years of expanded ranger deployment, drone surveillance, and growing cooperation with local Mising and Karbi communities who now have a direct stake in the rhinos’ survival. It stands as concrete evidence that sustained, community-supported wildlife protection can hold the line against one of the world’s most profitable illegal trade networks.

Industrial turbine machinery in a modern power facility for an article about supercritical CO2 power generation — 13 words.

China connects the world’s first commercial supercritical CO2 power generator to the grid

Supercritical CO2 power generation has reached a historic milestone as China’s Harbin Electric Corporation becomes the first in the world to operate a commercial-scale turbine using supercritical carbon dioxide — and connect it to a live national grid. The technology replaces conventional steam with pressurized CO2, achieving thermal efficiencies above 50% compared to roughly 40% for the best modern steam plants. Beyond efficiency, the turbines are dramatically more compact and work across multiple energy sources, including solar, nuclear, and industrial waste heat. China’s success gives the global engineering community proof that this long-pursued technology can actually work at scale, likely accelerating development timelines worldwide.

A gavel resting beside legal documents in a courtroom for an article about rape kit storage law reform — 14 words.

New York extends rape kit storage to 20 years, giving survivors more time to seek justice

New York’s rape kit storage law now requires sexual assault evidence to be preserved for 20 years, doubling the previous 10-year limit and giving survivors significantly more time to decide whether to pursue charges. Research consistently shows that many survivors need years or even decades before they feel ready to report, meaning shorter storage windows effectively forced premature legal decisions on people still processing trauma. The legislation is part of a broader package of survivor-focused reforms in New York, building on earlier efforts to address the national rape kit backlog. Advocates call the extended timeline a meaningful step toward aligning evidence policy with the reality of how survivors heal.

A hospital billing statement on a desk for an article about medical debt relief in Los Angeles County

Los Angeles County erases 3 million in medical debt for low-income residents

Los Angeles County has canceled 3 million in medical debt for tens of thousands of low-income residents, partnering with nonprofit RIP Medical Debt to purchase and erase unpaid hospital bills at pennies on the dollar. The program required nothing from recipients — just a letter confirming their debt was gone. With one in five L.A. adults carrying medical debt, and communities of color bearing a disproportionate share, the relief addresses both economic hardship and public health. The initiative reflects a growing movement among local governments nationwide to treat medical debt as a structural problem, not a personal failing.

A stingless Melipona bee resting on a tropical flower for an article about stingless bee rights in Peru

Peru grants Amazon stingless bees legal rights in a world first

Stingless bee rights made history in Peru when a court recognized Melipona bees as legal subjects — the first time any insect species has received formal legal protections anywhere in the world. The ruling, brought by Indigenous Amazonian communities who have practiced meliponiculture for thousands of years, establishes that advocates can now argue in court on the bees’ behalf against threats like mining, deforestation, and agricultural expansion. This matters because stingless bees pollinate an estimated 40 to 90 percent of native Amazonian plant species, making them irreplaceable to tropical ecosystems. The decision extends a growing global movement granting legal personhood to nature, but its real impact depends on enforcement.

Voters standing outside a polling station in East Africa for an article about Somalia one-person one-vote election

Somalis vote in the first one-person one-vote local election since 1969

Somalia’s first direct elections in over 50 years marked a landmark moment for democracy in November 2024, when citizens cast ballots in district council races for the first time since 1969. After decades of civil war, authoritarian rule, and indirect clan-delegate voting systems, ordinary Somalis finally chose their own local representatives. The elections included a 30% quota for women in council seats, a hard-won provision years in the making. Conducted amid ongoing security threats from al-Shabaab, the vote represents meaningful progress in Somalia’s long, difficult rebuilding process.