122 million fewer people needed treatment for tropical diseases in 2023 compared to the previous year. A reduction of 32 percent since 2010. The number of people affected by these diseases decreased from 1.9 billion in 1990 to just over 1 billion in 2021.| Warp News
Deforestation continues to decline, and net forest loss is less than half of what it was in the 1990s. Net loss of forest has decreased by 61 percent since the 1990s.| Warp News
ReShark is the world's first program to reintroduce sharks into nature, focusing on Indo-Pacific leopard sharks in Raja Ampat, Indonesia. The program uses surplus eggs from aquariums around the world that are transported to locally operated hatcheries in Indonesia.| Warp News
The population of humpback whales along Australia's east coast reached over 50,000 individuals in 2024, around 20,000 more than before commercial whaling began in the early 1900s.| Warp News
Illness and disability have decreased by 12.6 percent since 2010. Lost years of life due to infectious diseases have decreased by between 58.9 and 79.0 percent.| Warp News
73 percent of the world's adults feel safe walking alone at night in 2024, the highest figure since measurements began in 2006.| Warp News
The total number of reported fires has been halved during the same period, and the number of injured has decreased by more than half.| Warp News
Nearly 98 percent of patients with prostate cancer are alive at least five years after diagnosis in 2021.| Warp News
Super Typhoon Ragasa caused no fatalities when it reached mainland China last month.| Warp News
The lower cost applies to 120 low- and middle-income countries and takes effect in 2027.| Warp News
The Union is on track to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 54 percent by 2030 compared to 1990 levels. The target that the EU has set is a 55 percent reduction.| Warp News
Why do some societies become creative powerhouses while others stagnate? From Renaissance Florence to today's Silicon Valley, Norberg examines what makes civilizations flourish - and what threatens our own golden age.| Warp News