Good News Friday

  • In 1990, 12.8 million children died before the age of 5, in 2023, that number dropped to just 4.8 million. Things are still bad, but they’re getting better. WHO.
  • Last week would have been the 111th birthday of Norman Borlaug. The man who developed high-yield, disease-resistant wheat that sparked the Green Revolution, saving over a billion lives from hunger. Wikipedia.
  • Vaccines have prevented 18.8 million deaths since 2000. Gavi.
  • In 1995, an estimated 55% of Nepalis lived in extreme poverty. By 2023, this figure had plunged to just 0.37%. World Bank.
  • In the past 15 years, New Zealand’s grid has went from 65% renewable electricy to 88%, driven entirely by economics, without government incentives. Clean Technica.
  • Scientists develop concrete that captures carbon instead of emitting it. Northwestern University.
  • California now has nearly 50% more EV chargers than gas nozzles. Electrek.
  • Paralyzed man stands again after receiving reprogrammed stem cells. Nature.

For more good news, check out Fix the News and The Progress Network.

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