Tuesday, January 12, 2021

ANS -- 20 Things That Made the World a Better Place in 2020

Here's the end of the year story about positive things that happened last year.  But it was written before the final news in Argentina, which was positive too.  Enjoy.
--Kim


20 Things That Made the World a Better Place in 2020

From record-beating scientific discoveries to an elephant baby boom, this year was about much more than just a global pandemic.
vaccine
ILLUSTRATION: TRACEY J. LEE; CHANDAN KHANNA/GETTY IMAGES
WIRED UK

This story originally appeared on WIRED UK.

This is not a year we'll look back on fondly. It began with Australia on fire and ends with more than 1.5 million dead in a pandemic. But there have been bright points in this annus horribilis. While many of us saved lives by hunkering down at home watching Netflix, a communal act of selflessness that shouldn't be soon forgotten, progress was made in science, the environment, and even politics—Biden won! We can buy lab-grown meat! British beavers built a dam for the first time in 400 years! Here's our rundown of the best news to come out of 2020.

The World's First mRNA Vaccine Was Made in Less Than a Year

The world's medical and pharma scientists have never made a vaccine as quickly as they did this year—and we got three out of the bargain, with more to come. But the BioNTech and Moderna vaccines will not only let us emerge from lockdown, they're also the first using messenger RNA, proving that the vaccine technology works. That not only opens the door for its use against existing diseases but also means we could more quickly make vaccines to fight future pandemics—because we may have to do this all over again someday. Read more at WIRED.

Lab-Grown Meat Is on Sale for the First Time

The era of slaughter for protein could be coming to an end, with the Singapore Food Agency approving for the first time the sale of lab-grown chicken. Made by American company Eat Just, the cells for the "chicken bites" are harvested from live animals and grown in a bioreactor. Though foetal bovine serum is still used in the process, the company plans to switch to a plant-based growing medium for its next production line. Read more at The Guardian.

DeepMind Solves 50-Year-Old Protein-Folding Problem

DeepMind's AI has accurately predicted protein shapes from their sequences alone, a tough task that normally requires lengthy, expensive lab experiments. While the AI, known as AlphaFold, couldn't unpick all protein structures, it has helped answer questions that have long challenged researchers—and could herald major changes in medical research. Read more at Nature.

Nuclear Fusion Could Give Us Unlimited Clean Energy

Researchers are building a star on Earth in an attempt to create nuclear power without the radioactive waste. The Joint European Torus (JET) will begin work next year, smashing together hydrogen atoms to generate energy and heat, which could eventually be harvested to generate electricity. Read more at WIRED UK.

Kiwis Gift Remarkables Land to Nation

Dill and Jillian Jardine could have sold their 900 hectares along the shore of Lake Wakatipu in New Zealand's Remarkables mountain range to developers. After all, the region is popular among the remarkably wealthy, including PayPal and Palantir founder Peter Thiel. Instead, the farming couple donated it to a local trust as a park for the enjoyment of everyone, not just billionaires. Read more at The Guardian.

British Beavers Build a Dam for the First Time in Four Centuries

The National Trust released beavers into the wild in January, after the buck-toothed creatures went extinct in England 400 years ago. Efforts to return the animals have found success with beavers in Scotland relocated to the Holnicote Estate in Exmoor, where they've settled in well enough to chew up a few trees and assemble a "modest but … incredibly special" dam, according to the Trust. Read more at the BBC.

A Spider Species Is Rediscovered

Mike Waite of the Surrey Wildlife Trust spent two years in the dark tramping around a Ministry of Defense site, searching for a specific species of spider not seen in the UK since 1999. But in October, he spotted it: a great fox-spider. "It's a gorgeous spider, if you're into that kind of thing," he said. The 2-inch creature doesn't build a web, preferring instead to chase beetles and smaller arachnids and immobilize them with venom that liquefies their organs. How very 2020. Read more at The Guardian.

First New Coral Reef Found in 120 Years

Scientists mapping the seafloor north of Australia's Great Barrier Reef made a massive discovery: a new reef that's taller than the Empire State Building. It's the first such coral structure to be found in the region in 120 years, and aided by an underwater robot, the year-long exploration journey also discovered 30 new species of sea life, including a 150-foot-long predatory stringlike creature—yes, that's right—known as a siphonophore. Read more at the BBC.

Pandas Have Sex After a Decade-Long Wait

When the pandemic hit, Hong Kong's Ocean Park zoo shut to visitors. Several weeks later, perhaps enjoying their newfound privacy, pandas Ying Ying and Le Le did something zookeepers had been trying to inspire for 10 long years: They had sex. The mating doesn't appear to have led to a pregnancy for Ling Ling, but getting it on after 10 years of ignoring each other is encouraging to those in stale long-term relationships everywhere. Read more at Vice.

There's a Baby Boom—for Elephants

The Amboseli National Park in Kenya reported more than 170 calves by the end of summer, versus 113 in all of 2018—including two sets of twins. The pachyderm pregnancy peak followed heavy rain the previous year, which means better grazing and more successful births. Alongside the baby boom, Kenya said the rate of poaching had fallen to just seven for the year (as of August)—down from 80 in 2018—with the country's total elephant population rebounding from 16,000 in 1989 to more than 34,000. Read more at NPR.

Painting Turbine Blades Slashes Bird Deaths

The shift to wind power is good news for the planet, but bad news for birds that fly into the blades of turbines at onshore wind farms. Researchers at the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research have found a potential solution: painting one of the three rotor blades black to make them easier to see. And it worked, reducing bird strikes by 70 percent—not bad for a lick of paint. Read more at Ars Technica.

UK Record Coal-Free Run Tops 67 Days

67 days, 22 hours, and 55 minutes—it's the longest the UK has gone without coal-generated power since the industrial revolution. The record run came to an end in mid-June only because a North Yorkshire power station fired up a coal unit for maintenance. The rest of the energy mix during the two-plus months was dominated by renewable energy at 36 per cent, followed by gas at 33 percent and nuclear at 21 percent. Read more at The Independent.

Enzyme Eats Through Plastics

Plastic waste is choking the planet, but researchers at the University of Toulouse have found a mutant bacterial enzyme that will happily chew through it all, breaking it down for easy recycling into new plastic materials. The enzyme was originally discovered in a compost heap of leaves, though it needed some tweaking to optimize its ability to break down plastic. The mutated version managed to degrade a ton of waste plastic in 10 hours. Read more in WIRED.

SpaceX's First Launch With Humans

Elon Musk's SpaceX started the commercial space flight era by successfully launching a Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Crew Dragon capsule and two NASA astronauts, Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken, to the International Space Station. The Falcon 9 rocket has previously ferried cargo to orbit, but the trip marks the first private space launch with humans aboard—and the beginning of private space flight, including tourism. Read more at WIRED.

Porn Starts to Consider Ethics

Pornhub removed two-thirds of the videos on its site—some 10 million clips—after an investigation by The New York Times revealed that some of the user-uploaded clips featured children and other abuse, sparking Visa and Mastercard to halt processing payments. From now on, the site will permit only verified users to upload videos, perhaps finally kick-starting an era of ethics in mainstream porn sites. Read more at Motherboard.

The UK Gets Its First Tech Union

United Tech and Allied Workers set up a branch in the UK amid wider activism in the sector in the US, with walkouts at FacebookGoogle, and Amazon. The aim is to give workers more power to hold their employers accountable without having to quit and find another job—not easy during a pandemic. Read more at WIRED UK.

Art Sculpture Saves a Train Driver

Public transport met public art in dramatic, lifesaving fashion when a Rotterdam metro train crashed through buffers at the end of the elevated line in the Dutch city. The driver's carriage was saved from falling the 10 meters to the ground by a public art installation by Maarten Struijs, propped up by one of two whales' tails. Struijs called the accident "rather poetic," and he's not wrong: The name of the work is Saved by a Whale's Tale. Read more in The Times.

Kamala Harris Becomes the First Female Vice President

The US has its female vice-president, and she's a woman of color known to her stepkids as "Momala." In a year of difficult politics, and amid a backdrop of racial tension, the US managed to make a major step forward by electing Kamala Harris as the first female vice president. Read more pretty much anywhere, but start with The New York Times.

Argentina Set to Legalize Abortion

Abortion remains illegal across most of South America, but Argentina is set to become the first large nation and only the fourth on the continent to allow women the right to choose. It follows the lead of Cuba, Uruguay, and Guyana, though UN research suggests more than 6 million abortions still happen in the region each year, the majority of which are unsafe for women. The bill still needs to be approved by the senate later in December. Read more at The Guardian.

Endurance Runner Carries Disabled Friend to Top of Mount Olympus

Eleftheria Tosiou always wanted to scale Mount Olympus, the highest peak in Greece. The wheelchair-bound student reached the goal with the help of her friend, long-distance endurance runner Marios Giannakou, who scaled the 2,917-meter mountain with Tosiou strapped to his back. "I have never done something more beautiful," said Giannakou. "I think it has completed me as a person." Read more at Reuters.



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