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.
Every weekday morning at 7am. Or sign up for the weekly digest.
What Readers Are Saying
It restores my faith that homo sapiens sapiens, even if not in everything and always, deserves the name it has given itself.
Peter is all passion. He’s spent years working toward the greater good by helping his readership and community becoming the best version of themselves. His thoughtfully curated positive news stories stem from his genuine and effortless capacity to empathize. You’re an inspiration, Peter. Thank you!
Good News daily restores my faith in humanity and in Universal Source; I’ve shared this newsletter with family and friends and we love it! Hurray for Peter’s inspiration and generosity! So grateful.
I forward this to friends who need a remedy for despair.
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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Country All Afghanistan Albania Algeria Andorra Angola Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bangladesh Barbados Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia-Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Chad Cherokee Nation Chile China Colombia Congo Cook Islands Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Democratic Republic of Congo Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador England Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia European Union Faroe Islands Federated States of Micronesia Fiji Finland France French Polynesia Gabon Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Greenland Grenada Guadaloupe Guatemala Guyana Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kosovo Kuwait Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Lithuania Luxembourg Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mexico Micronesia Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar Namibia Nauru Nepal New Caledonia New Zealand / Aotearoa Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue North Korea North Macedonia Northern Ireland Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Palestine Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Scotland Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South America South Korea South Sudan Soviet Union Spain Sri Lanka St. Kitts & Nevis St. Lucia St. Vincent and the Grenadines Sudan Suriname Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Tanzania Thailand The Bahamas The Gambia The Netherlands The Philippines Timor Leste Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad & Tobago Tristan da Cunha Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Vatican City Venezuela Vietnam Wales Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe
Actor All Activists Artists & philosophers Athletes Business Cities Citizens Civil society Consumers Courts Early humans Engineers Finance Humanity Humankind Indigenous groups International organizations Inventors Kingdoms & empires Media & Journalists Military Nations Non-humans Regions Religious groups Science & academia Scientists & mathematicians Settlers & explorers States & provinces Utilities Workers World leaders
2024 C.E.
August 13
Nearly 350 U.S. mayors just pledged to electrify at least half their city vehicle fleets by 2030, from police cruisers to garbage trucks to buses. They're also committing to grow public EV charging fivefold by 2035, with 40% of those new chargers going to neighborhoods that have long breathed the dirtiest air. The bipartisan Climate Mayors network behind the pledge has grown from three founders a decade ago to more than 750 mayors representing...
2024 C.E.
August 12
Hawaii just elected its first transgender state lawmaker, and she did it by unseating the sitting House Speaker. Kim Coco Iwamoto won her Honolulu Democratic primary with 49.3% of the vote, edging out Scott Saiki by about five percentage points without the backing of the party establishment. A longtime civil rights attorney and former Board of Education member, Iwamoto ran on a platform that includes the Green New Deal, affordable housing, and stronger protections...
2024 C.E.
August 6
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...
2024 C.E.
August 2
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...
2024 C.E.
July 23
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...
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