What went right this week: the good news that matters

What went right this week: the good news that matters

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### Wild horses returned to the Kazakh steppe
The world’s last truly wild horse, the Przewalski’s horse, has been reintroduced to the steppes of Kazakhstan. Five individuals (one stallion, four mares) from European zoos were released into the Altyn Dala region. The species had vanished from this landscape around 200 years ago. This comeback is part of the Altyn Dala Conservation Initiative, which also brought back the saiga antelope, and won an Earthshot prize in 2024.
*Image credit: Jack Mifflin/ADCI, IZW*

### Offshore wind capacity set to quadruple by 2035
The Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) reports that offshore wind power capacity will quadruple globally by 2035, with China leading growth. Around 327GW of new capacity will come online, enough to power about 350 million homes. Despite setbacks like low US installations in early 2026, growth is strong worldwide. Deputy CEO Rebecca Williams highlighted challenges like planning delays and grid congestion but emphasized offshore wind as a key solution against future energy supply shocks.
*Image credit: Tianhao Wang*

### Rooftop solar curbs Australia’s emissions
Australia saw a 2% drop in carbon emissions last year, largely thanks to widespread rooftop solar adoption. The nation, a global leader in solar, also benefited from record wind energy generation, more battery use, and electric vehicle uptake. The climate and energy minister stated these figures show that environmentally friendly actions can also be economically beneficial.

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