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.

Nervous Swans in the Rice Fields, for article on tidal habitat restoration

California tears down levee in ‘largest tidal habitat restoration in state history’

Tidal waters rushed across 3,400 acres of California’s Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta this month after crews cut a 600-foot gap through a century-old levee at Lookout Slough — the first of nine planned breaches in what’s being called the largest tidal habitat restoration in state history. The reborn marsh will offer shallow, sediment-rich water for the endangered Delta smelt, a tiny fish whose health signals the wellbeing of the entire food web, while also giving salmon better passage and migrating birds new resting ground. It will also hold more than 40,000 acre-feet of floodwater, easing pressure on Sacramento-area communities during heavy storms. Lookout Slough is a quiet reminder that working with natural water systems, rather than against them, can protect wildlife and people at once.

Produce aisle at grocery store, for article on California plastic bag ban

California bans all plastic shopping bags at grocery stores

California’s plastic bag ban gets real on January 1, 2026, when even the thicker “reusable” plastic bags that quietly replaced the originals will disappear from grocery stores, pharmacies, and convenience stores statewide. Senator Catherine Blakespear, who authored the bill, put it plainly: those bags were single-use in everything but name. Shoppers will reach for paper or bring their own, and families using CalFresh and similar food assistance won’t pay the paper bag fee. California’s market is huge enough that what happens at its checkout counters tends to ripple outward, nudging manufacturers and other states to rethink their own rules. It’s a small, tangible reminder that closing loopholes — not just passing laws — is where real progress lives.

Good news for LGBTQ rights, for article on Thailand marriage equality, for article on conversion therapy ban, for article on same-sex partnership rights, for article on forced outing of queer students, for article on Greece same-sex marriage

Governor bans use of ‘conversion therapy’ on LGBTQ+ minors in Kentucky

Kentucky’s conversion therapy ban, signed by Gov. Andy Beshear this week, takes effect immediately and protects every minor seeing a licensed mental health professional in the state. The order also blocks state and federal dollars from funding the practice and lets licensing boards discipline anyone who violates it. One survivor at the signing, filmmaker Zach Meiners, spoke about four years of sessions as a teenager that he’s “still unraveling” — a reminder of why major medical groups have long called the practice harmful. Kentucky now joins nearly half of U.S. states with similar protections, a quietly growing patchwork that’s reshaping what safety looks like for LGBTQ+ young people even as other fights continue.

Closeup hands of old woman suffering from leprosy, for article on leprosy elimination

Jordan becomes first country to receive WHO verification for eliminating leprosy

Leprosy has officially been eliminated in a country for the first time, with the World Health Organization verifying that Jordan has gone more than 20 years without a single locally transmitted case. Reaching that milestone took decades of coordination between Jordan’s Ministry of Health and WHO, plus surveillance systems sharp enough to catch cases arriving from abroad before they could spark local spread. Health leaders are quick to note that this was also a fight against stigma, which has shadowed the disease for millennia. With over 200,000 new cases still diagnosed worldwide each year, mostly in lower-income regions, Jordan offers something the global effort hasn’t had before: living proof that the finish line is reachable.

Person filling syringe with vaccine, for article on mpox vaccines for Africa

Global alliance buys half a million mpox vaccines for Africa

Gavi has tapped its emergency First Response Fund for the very first time, committing up to $50 million to send 500,000 mpox vaccines to African countries hit hardest by the outbreak. The fund was built precisely for moments like this — letting the alliance move within days of a health emergency rather than waiting on slower funding cycles. The doses, from manufacturer Bavarian Nordic, will head to places like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which has carried the heaviest burden of the new Clade 1b strain. It’s a real start, even as experts estimate Africa needs around 10 million doses overall. If the tool keeps getting used and funded, it could reshape how quickly the world responds to outbreaks in lower-income regions.

A busy highway filled with electric vehicles charging at roadside stations for an article about global EV fleet milestone, for article on electric vehicles Norway

Norway becomes world’s first country to have more fully electric cars than gas cars

Electric vehicles in Norway have officially overtaken gasoline cars on the road, a first for any country. Out of roughly 2.87 million passenger vehicles nationwide, battery electric cars now lead — a stunning flip from 2004, when just 1,000 EVs shared the road with 1.6 million gas cars. The shift came not through bans but through years of steady incentives: tax breaks, cheaper tolls, and accessible charging that made going electric the obvious choice. Diesel could be the next domino to fall, possibly as soon as 2026. Norway’s quiet, two-decade transformation offers the rest of the world a hopeful blueprint — proof that a car-loving country really can rewire its roads within a single generation.

The Hague waterfront and buildings, for article on fossil fuel ad ban

The Hague becomes world’s first city to pass law banning fossil fuel-related ads

The Hague has just become the first city in the world to legally ban fossil fuel advertising, prohibiting promotions for petrol, diesel, aviation, and cruise ships across billboards, bus shelters, and other outdoor spaces starting in 2025. The ordinance took two years to pass and arrived only after voluntary agreements collapsed, with ad operators simply refusing to comply. Researchers compare it to tobacco advertising bans: the point isn’t just to stop one billboard, but to chip away at the sense that high-carbon choices are the normal default. Cities like Toronto, Graz, and Amsterdam have been waiting for someone to go first, and now they have a working legal template. It’s a small but meaningful reminder that cities don’t have to wait for national governments to start reshaping the climate conversation.

Aerial view of large solar farm, for article on Gulf solar projects

Qatar and Saudi Arabia announce four mammoth new solar projects totaling 7.5GW

Solar power is gaining serious ground in the Gulf, with Qatar and Saudi Arabia together unveiling four new photovoltaic projects totaling 7.5 gigawatts — enough capacity to power several million homes once online before 2030. That two of the world’s biggest oil producers are pouring this much into sunlight says something striking about where the economics now point. Saudi Arabia is aiming for half its electricity from renewables by decade’s end, and Qatar is building in parallel, joining neighbors like the UAE and Morocco already deep into their own clean energy buildouts. When petrostates start constructing gigawatt-scale solar, it’s a signal the global energy transition has crossed a threshold that even the old fossil fuel order can no longer ignore.

The beach with vegetation in foreground, for article on legal rights for ocean waves

In a first, the Brazilian city of Linhares grants legal rights to waves

Legal rights for ocean waves are now real: in August 2024, the Brazilian city of Linhares became the first government anywhere to extend legal personhood to part of the ocean, recognizing the waves at the mouth of the Doce River as rights-bearing. The waves had been smothered for seven years by mining sludge from a 2015 dam collapse, until a 2022 flood unexpectedly washed the river mouth clean. Rather than wait for the next disaster, the community wrote protection into law, requiring the city to actively defend the river’s flow and the waters it feeds. It’s a small, precise win with big implications — a hint of how coastal communities everywhere might begin defending the ecosystems they love on the ecosystems’ own terms.

Good news for Indigenous rights and climate, for article on Indigenous land titles

Record number of Indigenous land titles granted in Peru via innovative process

Indigenous land titles in the Peruvian Amazon just hit a new milestone: 37 communities secured formal recognition in under 11 months, the fastest pace in the country’s history. The breakthrough came from a partnership between AIDESEP, Peru’s Indigenous rights organization, and Rainforest Foundation U.S., who put satellite mapping tools and training directly into the hands of community forest monitors instead of routing everything through outside experts. Research suggests titled Indigenous territories see roughly two-thirds less deforestation than untitled lands nearby, making this one of the most effective climate tools we have. The model is designed to travel — a hopeful blueprint for protecting forests, honoring ancestral stewardship, and recognizing the communities who have cared for these ecosystems all along.