We are used to reading the most horrible and depressing news in media outlets. The media strives by serving us deflating news. Here at Sloto Magazine we want to put a spin on this and share with you empowering and positive news from last year. Let’s call this a “news diet” where you cut out the ongoing negative stream of news and add good news to your plate.

The Northern White Rhino could survive

The White Rhino is on the brink of extinction. Fortunately, seven eggs from the last 2 female White Rhinos have been fertilized in a lab. The team used frozen sperm from the last 2 White Rhinos before they died. The female Northern White Rhinos are unable to give birth anymore, so they plan to use a Southern White Rhino female as a surrogate mother for the fertilized eggs.

Amazon tribe wins lawsuit against Oil Company

The Waorani people of Ecuador have won an appeal that protects their territory in the Amazon against drilling for oil. The campaign was supported by celebrities like Leonardo DiCaprio and Mark Ruffalo. With this court decision, they protect half a million acres of Amazon rainforest.

A single man plants one tree per day for 35 years

Today he is known as the Forest Man of India. Payeng, 58, has spent over half his life (35 years) planting a tree a day on an island that was nothing but sand and driftwood. He first started with bamboo trees, followed by cotton trees and now he plants all kinds of trees. The island is now covered with grass and trees, with a forest bigger than Central Park (NYC).

Sea turtles making a comeback

A new survey of sea life has revealed that endangered sea turtles in the Pacific Ocean are growing in numbers. It is estimated that the population of these sea turtles has grown by 980%. This positive outcome could be the direct result of the Endangered Sea Act passed in 1973.

You can pay the metro in Rome with plastic bottles

A wonderful initiative in Rome allows metro-goers to pay their metro tickets with empty plastic bottles. The new program has encouraged thousands of people to recycle, with more the 3,500 bottles already recycled since October 2019.

Scientist creates biodegradable plastic from cactus

Sandra Pascoe Ortiz, a Mexican scientist, has devised a way to create fake plastic from the Prickly Pear Cactus. If this material ends up in the earth, it will completely disintegrate within 1 month; if set in water, it will disappear within days. Solutions like these could see finally a reversal to the contamination that plastic has caused over the last decades.

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