Good News for Humankind
Your daily spark of possibility
The world is changing — for the better, and in real, indisputable ways. Climate breakthroughs. Justice wins. Scientific discoveries. From people you’ve never heard of. In places you wouldn’t expect.
Every weekday, I send a piece of good news from around the world — not to sugarcoat reality, but to remind you that change is possible.
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Good News for Humankind has been a crack of light in my inbox for years because it provides a some counter balance to the dystopian info-tsunami that passes for news from other sources.
The Latest Good News
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2023 C.E.
May 31
Nepal's Supreme Court has ordered the government to seize illegal wildlife collections held by wealthy citizens, ending decades of selective enforcement that punished poor and Indigenous communities while elite collectors displayed tiger pelts and rhino heads openly in their homes. The May 2023 ruling, sparked by a writ petition from conservationist Kumar Paudel, requires private collectors to register their holdings — anything acquired after 1973, when Nepal's conservation law took effect, is subject to...
2023 C.E.
May 17
Fusion energy just took a big step from lab to grid: Helion Energy has signed the world's first commercial fusion power purchase agreement, promising Microsoft at least 50 megawatts of electricity from a plant targeted to come online in 2028. That timeline is roughly a decade ahead of most expert projections for commercial fusion. Helion has already built six prototypes and reached the 100-million-degree plasma temperatures considered necessary for self-sustaining reactions, with Constellation handling...
2023 C.E.
May 16
Pfizer's RSV vaccine ABRYSVO just became the first licensed option for at-risk adults as young as 18, closing a long-standing protection gap for younger people living with chronic conditions. About one in ten U.S. adults aged 18 to 49 has a condition like diabetes, asthma, or heart failure that raises their risk of severe RSV illness — and until now, they had nothing. The vaccine targets RSV's prefusion F protein, a breakthrough that finally...
2023 C.E.
May 11
Parkinson's disease may finally have a name attached to its cause: researchers at the University of Helsinki have identified specific strains of Desulfovibrio bacteria in the gut as the likely trigger behind most cases. Professor Per Saris estimates that about 90 percent of cases trace back to environmental exposure to these bacteria, with genetics accounting for only the remaining sliver. Because the culprit lives in the gut, it can in principle be screened for...
2023 C.E.
May 11
Ecuador just pulled off the largest debt-for-nature swap ever signed, unlocking an estimated $450 million for Galápagos marine conservation over the coming decades. The deal works by trading expensive international bonds for a cheaper loan, then channeling the savings into a new independent fund overseen by a board that mixes government ministers with civil society voices. Roughly $12 million a year will flow to park rangers, fisheries monitoring, and enforcement across one of the...
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