Welcome to the Good News round-up; if you made it here, you’re looking for positive stories, and we have you covered. Here are today’s positive headlines; we hope they will make you feel good – and inspired.The first 3D-printed wartime school to be built in Ukraine; a new device that could reduce shark bycatch by 90 per cent; the first woman to referee a men's World Cup match; Rolls-Royce and easyJet have successfully trialled a green solution for the aviation industry; and lessons from the 95-year-old who won the best new artist at the Latin Grammys.Since the Russian invasion began last February, over 2,000 schools in Ukraine are said to have been damaged or destroyed, but thanks to a pioneering project, there is hope that many Ukrainian children will be able to resume their education.Non-profit tech and humanitarian start-up TEAM4UA is behind this ambitious initiative, which aims to build schools using 3D printers working with city authorities.Various companies have offered to donate the technology and the foundations of the world’s first-ever 3D-printed school to be built in a war zone have already been laid on a street in Lviv, which is home to many of the people displaced by the war.Jean-Christophe Bonis, founder of Team4UA, explains why the first goal is to 3D-print an educational facility: “Because a lot of IDPs are here [in Lviv], refugees from the other part of Ukraine, and these children need to be able to keep flowing, having a life.”Bonis says his objective is to first create a pilot, “something that is relevant, and the school is the best way to mix the needs here on the ground.
Of course, after we will help to build hospitals and houses, because a lot of people have lost everything, but that is the next