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

This archive spans the years 2017 through 2025, a period marked by rapid advances in clean energy, medicine, technology, and social equity. It collects documented breakthroughs, policy wins, and scientific achievements from the present era. If you want evidence that progress is real and ongoing, this is where to look.

Aerial view of dense tropical rainforest canopy for an article about Mayan forest protection

Three nations sign agreement to protect 14 million acres of Mayan forest

Mayan forest protection took a historic step forward on August 15, 2025, when the leaders of Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize signed an agreement to safeguard more than 14 million acres of tropical forest as the Great Mayan Jungle Biocultural Corridor. The deal covers the Selva Maya, the largest continuous tropical forest in the Americas north of the Amazon, anchored in part by Belize’s biodiverse Bladen Nature Reserve. What sets this agreement apart is its formal integration of Indigenous Maya governance into conservation oversight, recognizing that cultural stewardship and ecological protection are inseparable. Significant challenges remain, but the commitment represents one of the most ambitious multilateral conservation efforts in the Western Hemisphere.

Plastic nurdles washed up on a tropical beach for an article about the X-Press Pearl disaster compensation ruling

Sri Lanka wins billion from shipping companies over X-Press Pearl disaster

Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court secured a landmark billion environmental ruling against the owners of the MV X-Press Pearl, the container ship that burned and sank off Colombo in 2021, releasing toxic chemicals and nearly 1,700 tonnes of plastic nurdles across South Asian waters. The July 2025 judgment delivers long-awaited accountability for thousands of fishing families whose livelihoods were devastated overnight. Beyond Sri Lanka, the ruling demonstrates that courts in developing nations can enforce the polluter-pays principle against powerful global shipping interests. Environmental groups are calling it a potential model for the Global South.

A health worker administering a vaccine to a young child for an article about Nepal rubella elimination

Nepal eliminates rubella as a public health problem, WHO confirms

Nepal rubella elimination was officially confirmed by the World Health Organization in August 2025, making the country the sixth nation in the WHO South-East Asia Region to reach this milestone. The achievement reflects more than a decade of vaccination campaigns, community outreach, and surveillance work conducted despite earthquakes, a pandemic, and significant resource constraints. Rubella poses its greatest danger during pregnancy, where infection can cause miscarriage, stillbirth, or congenital rubella syndrome — a cluster of lifelong birth defects. Nepal pushed vaccine coverage above 95% nationwide, also becoming the first country in the region to adopt an advanced laboratory surveillance system.

Rainbow flag flying above a European city square for an article about same-sex family recognition in Lithuania

Lithuanian court recognizes same-sex couple as a family for the first time

Same-sex family recognition in Lithuania reached a historic milestone in May 2025, when the Vilnius City District Court became the first court in the country to grant legal family status to a same-sex couple and order the state to register their relationship. The ruling was won through years of litigation by LGBTQ+ rights organization TJA, building on a April 2025 Constitutional Court decision that found excluding same-sex couples from civil partnership recognition violated constitutional rights. With parliament still stalled on legislation, this case proves courts can close the gap between constitutional principle and lived reality.

Plastic waste floating in a Lagos canal for an article about the Lagos plastics ban — 12 words.

Lagos bans single-use plastics in one of Africa’s most polluted cities

Lagos plastics ban took effect July 1, 2025, prohibiting styrofoam containers, plastic cutlery, plates, and straws across Nigeria’s commercial capital of 15 million people. The city generates at least 13,000 tons of waste daily, with plastic clogging canals and worsening seasonal flooding in low-income neighborhoods. The ban builds on a 2024 federal policy targeting similar items, signaling coordinated national momentum. What makes this significant is that it carries real enforcement consequences — including business closure for repeat violators — setting it apart from environmental pledges with no teeth.

A quiet Helsinki street with a bike lane and pedestrian crosswalk for an article about zero traffic deaths

Helsinki completes a full year with zero traffic deaths

Helsinki’s zero traffic deaths milestone after 12 consecutive fatality-free months represents one of the most significant urban road safety achievements on record. The Finnish capital, home to nearly 700,000 people, has recorded no traffic fatalities since July 2024, the result of three decades of systematic infrastructure redesign, speed limit reductions, and Vision Zero planning. Lower speed limits, raised crosswalks, automated enforcement, and exceptional public transit have combined to dramatically reduce both deaths and injuries. Helsinki proves that zero is not an accident but a policy choice sustained over time.

The Massachusetts State House dome in Boston for an article about Massachusetts shield law protections

Massachusetts Senate passes Shield Act 2.0 to protect abortion and gender-affirming care

Massachusetts Shield Act 2.0 passed the state Senate 37-3 on June 26, 2025, strengthening protections for patients and providers seeking abortion care and gender-affirming care within the state. The updated law bars state agencies from cooperating with out-of-state or federal investigations targeting legally protected healthcare, restricts sharing of patient data, and mandates emergency care at acute-care hospitals. Critically, it extends new protections to clinicians themselves, allowing prescriptions under practice names and removing certain medications from drug monitoring programs to reduce provider exposure. The bill now moves to the Massachusetts House, representing the state’s third expansion of these protections in three years.

Hands pressing a seedling into dark soil for an article about tree planting Ethiopia

Ethiopia mobilizes millions to plant 700 million trees in a single day

Ethiopia’s Green Legacy Initiative reached a historic milestone on July 31, 2025, when millions of citizens planted 700 million seedlings in a single day as part of the country’s sweeping reforestation campaign. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed joined schoolchildren and civil servants nationwide, reflecting the program’s emphasis on genuine civic participation over top-down mandates. Launched in 2019 with a target of 50 billion trees by 2026, the initiative addresses decades of devastating deforestation that has eroded soils and threatened food security for millions. Questions about seedling survival rates and ecological oversight remain, but Ethiopia’s effort stands as one of the most ambitious nature-based climate solutions attempted anywhere on Earth.

Aerial view of a vegetated wildlife overpass spanning a busy highway for an article about Greenland wildlife overpass

Colorado’s Greenland wildlife overpass is now the largest in the world

Colorado’s Greenland Wildlife Overpass, completed in December 2025, is now the largest wildlife crossing on Earth — nearly an acre wide and built to reconnect elk, pronghorn, and mule deer across one of the state’s busiest highways. The structure links 39,000 acres of conserved Douglas County land with over one million acres of Pike National Forest, restoring a migration corridor fragmented by Interstate 25. As part of an 18-mile system of crossings and fencing, it is projected to reduce wildlife-vehicle collisions by up to 90 percent. At 5 million, the investment is modest compared to the cumulative cost of doing nothing.

Solar panels on a field in Italy for an article about the Vatican solar farm carbon-neutral state plan

Vatican City signs solar deal that could make it the world’s first carbon-neutral state

Vatican solar farm plans mark a historic step toward making the Holy See the world’s first carbon-neutral state. The Vatican has signed an agreement with Italy to convert a 430-hectare extraterritorial property north of Rome into a solar facility capable of meeting all of Vatican City’s electricity needs. The site carries complicated history, having hosted Vatican Radio transmission towers linked to community health concerns for decades. Backed by papal commitment, a bilateral agreement, and a concrete budget under €100 million, this project demonstrates that institutions can align stated values with structural environmental action.