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.

A child sleeping under a mosquito net in a tropical setting for an article about malaria prevention saving 14 million lives

Global malaria prevention has saved 14 million lives since 2000 C.E.

Malaria prevention programs have saved an estimated 14 million lives and averted 2.3 billion cases of the disease since 2000, according to the WHO World Malaria Report. In 2024 alone, more than 170 million cases and 1 million deaths were prevented, while the number of countries reporting fewer than 1,000 annual cases nearly tripled to 37. Twenty-four countries have now introduced WHO-approved malaria vaccines into routine childhood immunization, a rollout achieved in under four years. Serious challenges remain, including rising drug resistance and a global funding gap that reached 58% in 2024, leaving the gains fragile but undeniable.

Residential apartment buildings in Helsinki for an article about Finland Housing First

Finland cut homelessness by 75% — and the rest of the world is watching

Finland Housing First policy stands as one of the most remarkable social policy achievements of the modern era, reducing the country’s homeless population by roughly 75% since 2008. Rather than requiring sobriety or employment before offering shelter, Finland gives people housing unconditionally, letting support services follow once residents have a stable foundation. The results are concrete: long-term homelessness fell 68% between 2008 and 2022, and housing a formerly homeless person saves Finnish society approximately 15,000 euros annually in emergency costs. The program proves chronic homelessness is solvable, not inevitable, though recent government cuts offer a sobering reminder that even exceptional systems depend on sustained political will.

Dried psilocybin mushrooms on a surface for an article about psilocybin therapy legalization in New Mexico, for article on Oregon psilocybin facilitators

New Mexico becomes the third U.S. state to legalize psilocybin therapy

New Mexico’s Medical Psilocybin Act makes the state the third in the U.S. to legalize psilocybin therapy, but its path stands apart from Oregon and Colorado. Rather than a ballot measure, the legislation passed through the state legislature with an overwhelming bipartisan margin of 56 to 8 in the House. The law creates a regulated clinical framework for treating PTSD, treatment-resistant depression, and other conditions, with a dedicated 30,000 equity fund to subsidize access for low-income patients. That combination of legislative flexibility and built-in affordability measures offers a replicable model for other states watching closely.

Cargo ship, for article on shipping emissions framework

Countries reach historic deal to cut shipping emissions

Shipping emissions just got their first global climate framework — covering the large ocean-going vessels responsible for 85 percent of the industry’s CO₂. Negotiated at the International Maritime Organization in April 2025, the agreement pairs a progressively tightening fuel standard with a carbon price: ships exceeding emissions limits pay in, while near-zero vessels earn rewards. The revenue flows into a dedicated Net-Zero Fund supporting clean energy innovation and easing the transition for small island states and least developed countries already on the front lines of climate change. For an industry long considered one of the hardest to decarbonize — and one that operates beyond any single nation’s reach — this is a quietly historic turn toward cleaner seas and a fairer global transition.

Solar panels and wind turbines generating power on open land for an article about U.S. clean electricity

Fossil fuels fall below half of U.S. electricity for the first time on record

U.S. clean electricity reached a historic milestone in April 2025, when fossil fuels dropped below 50% of American electricity generation for the first time since the coal-powered grid emerged in the 1800s. According to energy research firm Ember, coal, oil, and natural gas fell to roughly 47% of total generation, with wind, solar, hydro, and nuclear powering the rest. This shift was driven by a 90% drop in wind and solar costs since 2010, triggering sustained investment now visible in real grid output. The milestone matters because it breaks the long-held assumption that fossil fuels are the inevitable backbone of modern electricity.

Chevron gas station located near a Louisiana wetlands restoration project site along the coast, for article on Louisiana wetlands restoration

Chevron ordered to pay $740 million to restore Louisiana coast in landmark trial

Louisiana wetlands just got a powerful new defender: a jury ordered Chevron to pay $744.6 million to restore marshland in Plaquemines Parish, with interest pushing the total past $1.1 billion. Jurors found that Texaco, which Chevron acquired in 2001, had spent decades dredging canals and dumping wastewater into the marsh without meaningful cleanup. The ruling matters far beyond one rural parish — it’s the first of dozens of similar cases to reach trial, and the communities on this vanishing coast are disproportionately Black, Indigenous, and low-income. As courts from Europe to the Americas increasingly hold polluters accountable, this verdict signals that coastal destruction is no longer just a political fight. It’s a legal one.

Morning fog over the brazilian rainforest in Brazil, for article on uncontacted Indigenous territory

Colombia creates landmark territory to protect uncontacted Indigenous groups

Colombia’s new Yuri-Passé territory protects more than one million hectares of southern Amazon rainforest — the country’s first area created specifically to shield an uncontacted Indigenous group from outside interference. Neighboring Indigenous communities, who had quietly known about the Yuri-Passé for generations, spent over a decade gathering evidence and building trust with the government to make this happen. What’s remarkable is that they led the entire process: shaping the framework, presenting the case, and bringing the state along with them. The protected zone also overlaps with Río Puré National Park, safeguarding habitat for giant anteaters, giant armadillos, and hundreds of other species. With more than 100 isolated Indigenous groups still living across the Amazon, this Indigenous-led approach offers a hopeful template for protecting both peoples and forests worldwide.

Prairie Land Potawatomi Nation's Chief Shab-eh-nay, for article on Land Back Illinois

Illinois returns stolen land to Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation

Land Back just scored a major win in Illinois: Governor JB Pritzker signed a law transferring 1,500 acres of Shabbona Lake State Recreation Area to the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, honoring a treaty signed in 1829. The land was taken while Chief Shab-eh-nay was visiting family in Kansas, then sold off to settlers. Returning it took years of patient relationship-building by nation chairman Joseph “Zeke” Rupnick, who met repeatedly with neighbors and lawmakers. The park stays open to its half-million annual visitors, with campsites and trails intact — what changes is who holds the title. It’s one parcel, but it’s a real, legally binding step in a movement reshaping how the U.S. reckons with Indigenous land.

A surgeon performing minimally invasive robotic surgery for an article about NeuroSafe prostate surgery, for article on NeuroSafe prostate cancer surgery

NeuroSafe prostate surgery nearly doubles odds of keeping erectile function after cancer treatment

NeuroSafe prostate surgery nearly doubles the chances of men retaining erectile function after prostate cancer treatment, according to the first large-scale clinical trial of the technique. Published in Lancet Oncology and presented at the 2025 European Association of Urology congress, the trial found 39% of NeuroSafe patients reported no or mild erectile dysfunction one year after surgery, compared to just 23% receiving standard care. The procedure works by freezing and examining prostate tissue mid-operation, letting surgeons spare surrounding nerves when it is safe to do so. For the 50,000 men diagnosed with prostate cancer in England each year, this advance offers a meaningful path forward without forcing a choice between cure and quality of life.

A medical professional preparing an injectable syringe for an article about lenacapavir HIV prevention, for article on annual HIV injection

Annual jab for HIV protection passes trial hurdle

A once-yearly HIV prevention shot has just cleared its first safety trial, with the drug lenacapavir still detectable in participants’ bodies a full 56 weeks after a single injection. That’s a hopeful sign for people who find daily prevention pills hard to maintain — whether because of stigma, unstable housing, or simply the grind of remembering. Earlier trials of twice-yearly lenacapavir already showed striking results, and researchers are now testing whether one shot a year could work just as well. With nearly 40 million people living with HIV globally, a prevention tool this simple could reshape what protection looks like — especially for communities where daily medication has never been realistic.