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It's here, the big one, the best good news
stories of 2024,
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and what a wild year it's been.
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If you're new here, I'm Sam and I make
videos showing good news and solutions
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to some of the world's biggest problems.
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And I make monthly roundups of positive
stories that you might have missed.
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And that's because this year,
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the average person may have spent six
to seven days doomscrolling,
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so I wanna balance that out a little bit,
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and show you there are reasons to feel
hopeful.
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If you've been here before, thank you so
much my friend.
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And if you've been enjoying these good
news roundups,
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tap that like button and I'll keep them
coming in 2025 too.
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I've also asked a few friends for their
favourite good news story of 2024,
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so keep an eye for who pops up in this
video.
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But let's get into it. Here's some good
news from 2024 that you might have missed.
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2024 started with news that, after years
of decline,
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elephant populations in much of Southern
Africa had stabilized,
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and even begun to recover, thanks to
new conservation strategies,
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like wildlife corridors, that link
protected areas together,
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and provide safe passages for animals.
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And a national park in Republic of Congo,
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even celebrated their first year without
any elephant poaching.
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And groundbreaking research from the
US Department of Energy found that
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when you combine solar farms with native
wildflowers,
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it can triple insect numbers on that
land in five years.
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And one of the awesome things I came
across in January was the Akshar School
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in Assam, India, that lets the students
pay the school fees using plastic waste
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instead of money.
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It was created by Mazin and Parmita, who
wanted to find a creative way to stop the
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local villages' toxic bonfires and plastic
waste
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that were endangering
their students' health.
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Each week, the students must bring over
twenty-five items of plastic from their
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homes, or picked from the streets,
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and they learn how to reuse this waste
in a bunch of creative ways.
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How awesome is that?
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Now, onto February. And we'll start with
some wins for our ocean.
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Nine countries united to protect
endangered river dolphins
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around the world, by signing the Global
Declaration for River Dolphins.
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Chile and Palau became the first
countries to ratify the High Seas Treaty,
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which is an international commitment to
protect our oceans, beyond the borders
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of any country.
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The High Seas is an area of ocean roughly
40 miles or more from the nearest country.
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It makes up half the planet's surface and
before this treaty,
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only 1% of it was protected.
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There was some big news for clean energy
in Feb.
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A scientist at the UK's jet laboratory set
a new nuclear fusion world record,
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generating 69 megajoules in five seconds.
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Fusion energy has the potential to
revolutionize the way we power our world,
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producing vast amounts of energy, with no
carbon emissions and minimal waste.
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While still far from commercial use,
this milestone tripled 1997 results.
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And in fact, just last month, it was
announced that Tokamak Energy,
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a UK-based nuclear fusion startup,
secured 125 million dollars,
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to develop its distinctive egg-shaped
reactor design,
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which could bring us one step closer
to unlocking clean, limitless energy.
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Countries also started cracking down
on cosmetic companies in February,
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as the EU drafted a law to make cosmetics
companies pay for their pollution,
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stating that under The Polluter Pays
Principle, they'd have to cover 80% of the
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cost of cleaning micro-pollutants
from waterways.
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And New Zealand became one of the first
countries to ban Forever Chemicals
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in all cosmetic products too.
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And it wasn't just countries fighting
against pollution.
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A scientist from Nanyang Technological
University in Singapore
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developed an artificial worm that can
break down plastics.
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These super-worms can digest plastic
thanks to their gut bacteria,
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and it offers a nature-based solution
to tackle the global plastic problem.
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And an innovator from Ireland, Fionn
Ferrara,
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created a way of removing
microplastics from water using magnets.
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By simply adding a magnetic liquid
known as ferrofluid into water,
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it binds to the tiny microplastic
particles, which can then be drawn out
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using a magnet.
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It removes up to 85% of microplastics in a
single go,
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and the process is still improving.
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Before we get into March, here's a good
news story from my friend Nomzamo.
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Hey Sam, it's Nomzamo here! My favourite
story of 2024 was seeing
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The Earthshot Prize come to the African
continent and make an incredible,
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incredible impact. But most importantly,
seeing young people from around the world
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be a part of the inaugural youth program
as part of the Earthshot,
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and making such incredible impact and
also change. So, that's me!
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We marched into March with news that
Pakistan had tripled their mangrove
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forests over the last thirty years.
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These coastal superheroes not only provide
homes for wildlife,
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but also form a crucial shield against the
effects of climate change.
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This simple model from Dutch Research
Institute, Deltares,
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makes it super easy to understand how
mangroves can protect the coast from the
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impact of waves from a heavy storm.
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The European parliament passed a
nature restoration law
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that aims to restore 20% of the EU's
land and sea by 2030.
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This plan includes things like restoring
25000 kilometers of rivers to free-flowing
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conditions to help reconnect habitats,
and planting over 3 billion tress across
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Europe to recover degraded and deforested
land.
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And protecting our natural world isn't
just important as it basically allows us
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to live, but we're also discovering new
things about it all the time.
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For example, in March, scientists discovered
almost 100 new deep sea species,
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living up to 14000 feet under the sea,
in the underwater mountains of Chile.
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Moving from the deep sea to space,
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a new satellite was announced in March
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that is dedicated to tracking methane
emissions and their sources worldwide,
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and could play a role in holding big
polluters to account,
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as air pollution often flies under the
radar and is a major health problem.
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There was some good news in the air
though,
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as air quality in Europe has significantly
improved.
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According to studies that analyze air
pollution across Europe,
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from 2003 to 2019, it showed
significant declines in harmful
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particles, and nitrogen dioxide levels,
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especially in urban and central regions.
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If you're enjoying this video so far,
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give that like button a tap. And if you're
feeling extra generous, throw a random
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comment down below to help boost the
good news in the algorithm.
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Now onto April.
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In April, Greece became the first country
in Europe to ban bottom trawling in all
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its marine-protected areas by 2030.
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And Sweden joined them a
couple of months later.
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This is where big, heavy fishing nets
are dragged across the ocean floor,
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destroying habitats and releasing carbon
that's stored in the ocean.
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And in another win for the ocean, a
landmark treaty was signed by
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Indigenous leaders from Aotearoa, Cook
Islands, Tonga, Tahiti, Hawai'i,
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and Rapa Nui, that gives whales legal
personhood in the region.
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This means that whales will be recognized
as a legal entity with rights,
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such as having freedom of movement,
freedom to a healthy ocean, and even
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freedom to express their own culture
including their language.
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Pre-loved clothing - like this, actually -
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8 euros from Paris, continue to take off
around the world.
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And in the US, the secondhand clothing
market grew seven times faster than the
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brand new clothing market, and the global
demand for secondhand clothes
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is expected to double in the next
three years.
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The United States took a monumental
20 billion dollar initiative to restore
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Florida's everglades, one of the largest
environmental restoration projects
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in history.
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And another landmark that made history in
April were these lovely ladies.
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They're called Senior Women for Climate
Protection, and they took the Swiss
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government to court, claiming they were
not doing enough to address
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climate change. Which is putting them at
risk of dying during heat waves,
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which due to their age and gender they're
especially impacted by.
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And this was a violation of their human rights.
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And on that note,
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here's my friend Alaina's favourite
good news story of 2024.
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It's Alaina here. My favourite story of
this year is that the number of lawsuits
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filed against the fossil fuel industry
has tripled since the signing of the
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Paris Agreement in 2016.
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And more people join the fire against
polluting fossil fuel companies,
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as Cambridge University became the first
university in the UK to reject donations
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from fossil fuel groups, following
pressure from students and staff.
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And since then, over 75% of UK
universities have now pledged to ditch
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fossil fuel investments.
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And Uruguay showed us that a future
is possible without burning fossil fuels,
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as it ran non 100% renewables for ten
months straight, generating all of its
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electricity from hydro, wind bioenergy and
solar,
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and this was on top of news in April that
seven countries now generate of 99% of
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their electricity from renewable sources,
and wind power even overtook fossil fuels
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in generating electricity in the UK.
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Let's start May in Texas, where a new
campaign called Lights Out Texas
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encouraged people to turn off their
lights at night to help billions of birds
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migrate safely through the state.
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By simply making sure that lights are
turned off at night during the spring and
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autumn migratory seasons, we can reduce
the confusion caused during the birds'
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nighttime ventures, and ease their long
journeys across the globe.
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Small steps like this show just how
impactful conservation can be,
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and in fact, a study in the same month,
which examined the success and impact of
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conservation projects over the last 150
years, has found that conservation
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projects are almost always successful, and
we're even getting better at
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looking after nature too.
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For this next story, I'm gonna pass the
mic over so we can hear about some wins
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from the global South.
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In May, I also came across Moses West,
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who designed a machine that creates clean
drinking water from thin air,
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that he gives away to people who need it
for free.
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This process is called atmospheric water
generations, and Moses is using it to make
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sure that everyone has access to clean
water, no matter where they live,
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how old they are, or how much money
they have.
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I actually did an interview with Moses
that I posted over on my Patreon that goes
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way more into his innovations, so if
you're interested in learning more,
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go check that out.
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One of the things that makes me feel
hopeful for the future is seeing the next
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generations come through with
revolutionary ideas,
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and that's exactly how June kicked off,
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as two teenagers won 50000 dollars for
inventing a device that can filter
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microplastics from water.
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17-year-olds Victoria Ou and Justin Huang
from Texas developed a device that uses
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ultrasonic soundwaves to filter
microplastics from water,
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winning them $50,000 at the Regeneron
International Science and Engineering Fair
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that will help them develop the idea
further.
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At the same event, 18-year-old