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.

Shot of a young male doctor standing with his arms crossed in an office at a hospital, for article on HBCU medical school funding

Michael Bloomberg gives $600 million to four Black medical schools’ endowments

HBCU medical schools just received $600 million from Bloomberg Philanthropies, with Howard, Meharry, and Morehouse each getting $175 million and Charles R. Drew receiving $75 million. The gift will more than double the endowments at three of the four schools, giving them the kind of long-term, flexible funding that lets institutions plan decades ahead — recruiting faculty, expanding class sizes, and offering scholarships without leaning so hard on tuition. An additional $5 million supports a new medical school launching at Xavier University of Louisiana with Ochsner Health. Black Americans make up roughly 13% of the U.S. population but less than 6% of practicing physicians, and research consistently links Black doctors to better outcomes for Black patients. Training more of them is one of the clearest paths toward closing that gap.

And nine more of humanity’s social change milestones from the week of July 1 – 7 2024 C.E., for article on China renewable energy

Wind and solar capacity overtake coal in China in historic first

China renewable energy just hit a milestone that seemed unthinkable a decade ago: combined wind and solar capacity has officially surpassed coal, with the country on track to reach 1,200 GW of installed clean power by the end of 2024 — six years ahead of its own national target. The pace is staggering. Since 2020, China has added more than 100 GW of wind and solar every single year, and in 2023 alone it installed a record 293 GW. Coal generation actually dipped year-on-year in May and June of 2024 as renewables picked up the slack. When the world’s largest energy consumer crosses a threshold like this, the global math on climate genuinely begins to change.

South African flag, for article on South Africa Climate Change Act

South Africa passes its first sweeping climate change law

South Africa’s new Climate Change Act, signed by President Cyril Ramaphosa in July 2024, gives the country its first legally binding framework for cutting emissions and adapting to a warming world. For a nation that generates roughly 40% of sub-Saharan Africa’s carbon emissions, that legal spine matters enormously. The law creates enforceable carbon budgets, requires government departments to report progress every five years, and writes just transition principles directly into the text, recognizing coal workers and their communities as the energy system shifts. Advocates spent years pushing for this across multiple administrations. It’s a foundation rather than a finish line, but a foundation that can be built upon, challenged in court, and strengthened in ways voluntary pledges never allowed.

Ocean water, for article on law of the sea treaty, for article on ITLOS climate ruling

Island states win historic climate case in world oceans court

Nine small island nations just won a landmark climate ruling from the world’s top ocean court, with judges declaring for the first time that greenhouse gases absorbed by the sea legally count as marine pollution. The coalition — including Tuvalu, Antigua and Barbuda, Vanuatu, and Palau — argued that countries have binding obligations under the Law of the Sea to limit warming to 1.5°C, and the tribunal agreed. Though the opinion is advisory, it’s already shaping two pending climate cases at the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the International Court of Justice. For nations whose very existence is threatened by rising seas, it’s a reminder that patient diplomacy and international law can still give the smallest voices real weight in the global climate fight.

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

South Korea’s top court upholds the rights of people in same-sex relationships in historic ruling

South Korea’s Supreme Court just ruled that same-sex couples must receive the same National Health Insurance spousal benefits as heterosexual couples — declaring that denying them violates “human dignity and the right to pursue happiness.” The case began when So Seong-wook and Kim Yong-min sued after the insurer revoked coverage it had already granted, then demanded repayment. Their five-year legal journey ended with the country’s highest court extending a concrete, practical protection to partners who previously had no legal pathway to claim it. While South Korea still doesn’t recognize same-sex marriage, the court’s use of dignity-based language matters beyond this case. It’s a reminder that progress on equality often arrives one couple, one ruling at a time — opening doors that legislatures haven’t yet been willing to.

Baby crocodile, for article on Siamese crocodile hatching

Near-extinct Siamese crocodiles make comeback in Cambodia

Sixty baby Siamese crocodiles have hatched in Cambodia’s Cardamom Mountains, the largest single hatching of this critically endangered species recorded anywhere this century. With only around 400 surviving in the wild worldwide, those tiny new arrivals represent a meaningful slice of the entire global population. What makes the news especially hopeful is where the five nests were found: in an area where no captive-bred crocodiles had ever been released, meaning the species is quietly breeding on its own again. Local community wardens guarded the nests around the clock until every egg hatched, a reminder that this recovery belongs to the people who live alongside these rivers. For a species many scientists once believed extinct in the wild, it’s a quiet, powerful sign that patient, community-led conservation works.

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

California passes first-in-the-nation law banning forced outings of queer students in state public schools

California just became the first state in the country to ban schools from forcibly outing queer students, after Governor Newsom signed the SAFETY Act into law and it took effect immediately. The bill, which passed the State Assembly 60-15, also shields teachers from retaliation if they refuse to disclose a student’s gender identity to parents without consent. It arrived after years of organizing by educators like Karen Poznanski, a Murrieta teacher and parent of a nonbinary child, whose complaint helped trigger a state investigation. Eight other states currently require this kind of outing, so California’s move offers a real counter-model. For queer kids deciding when and how to come out, this puts one of life’s most tender conversations back in their own hands.

image for article on rights of nature ruling

Ecuador river is granted the right to not be polluted in historic court case

Ecuador’s Machángara River just won a landmark legal case: a court ruled that decades of pollution have violated the river’s constitutional rights, and Quito must now draft a concrete cleanup plan. The river runs through a capital city of 2.6 million people, and its oxygen levels have dropped to around 2 percent — barely livable for aquatic life. The Indigenous organization Kitu Kara filed the complaint on the river’s behalf, drawing on Andean traditions that treat rivers as living relatives. From New Zealand’s Whanganui to Colombia’s Amazon, this approach is spreading, giving courts a way to protect ecosystems as parties with standing rather than property — and reshaping what environmental justice can mean for communities everywhere.

Big Ben with bridge over Thames and flag of England against blue sky in London, for article on women in Parliament

British voters elect record number of women to Parliament

Britain’s 2024 general election sent at least 242 women to the House of Commons, the most in the chamber’s history and a jump from the previous record of 220 set in 2019. That brings female representation past 37% of the 650-seat lower house, climbing steadily from 30% just a decade ago. Behind the number is decades of deliberate work by parties to recruit women candidates, alongside shifting expectations about who belongs in power. Research suggests that once women hold more than a token share of seats, legislatures tend to take up health, education, and family policy with fresh seriousness. It’s a reminder that representation, once it reaches a critical mass, starts reshaping what democracies pay attention to.

Fervo Energy geothermal plant, for article on enhanced geothermal power purchase agreement

World’s biggest geothermal power purchase agreement completed in western U.S.

A Utah geothermal project just secured what developers are calling the world’s largest geothermal power purchase agreement — a 15-year deal to deliver 320 megawatts of always-on clean electricity to Southern California Edison, enough to power roughly 350,000 homes. Fervo Energy’s Cape Station plant uses horizontal drilling borrowed from the oil and gas industry to circulate water through deep hot rock, unlocking geothermal power in places where it was never viable before. First electrons are expected to flow in 2026, with the rest coming online by 2028. For a clean grid that needs to run when the sun sets and the wind stops, this kind of steady, weather-proof power may be the missing piece — and a signal that geothermal is ready for prime time.