Currently en Puerto Rico — 13 de julio, 2023: Se torna soleado y brumoso

El tiempo, currently.

Se torna más soleado y brumoso

No se puede descartar algún aguacero aislado rezagado detrás de la onda tropical del miércoles, pero el potencial de lluvia el jueves y viernes caerá a niveles bajos para la época de verano. Aire sahariano contribuirá a estabilizar el ambiente, mientras que limitará la visibilidad y causará un cielo blancuzco aún cuando brille el sol. En ausencia de lluvias, las temperaturas volverán a niveles preocupantes para algunos municipios de la isla, donde la sensación térmica fácilmente entrará en los triple dígitos. En cuanto a actividad ciclónica en el Atlántico, actualmente solo se observa una perturbación al oeste de las Islas Azores la cual no tiene relevancia para el sector caribeño.

—John Toohey-Morales

What you can do, currently.

The climate emergency doesn’t take the summer off. In fact — as we’ve been reporting — we’re heading into an El Niño that could challenge historical records and is already supercharging weather and climate impacts around the world.

When people understand the weather they are experiencing is caused by climate change it creates a more compelling call to action to do something about it.

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What you need to know, currently.

Water temperatures in Florida have gone off the charts, the latest sign that climate change is accelerating to new heights in 2023.

A buoy off of Murray Key near Everglades National Park soared to 96.8°F (36.0°C) on Monday, 10 degrees F higher than the average summer peak, and just shy of the 99.7°F (37.6°C) global ocean temperature record set in Kuwait in 2020.

That warm water is making life miserable on land, too. A running log of heat index values in Miami have reached unprecedented heights in recent weeks due in part to the proximity to the warm water. As of Wednesday, Miami’s heat index has reached at least 100°F (37.8°C) for 32 consecutive days.

Marine scientists have expressed alarm about the consequences of the extremely warm water on Florida’s fragile coral reefs, calling the current heat wave “horrific”.

“I’m most worried that this level of heat will persist — that the corals that are experiencing these warm waters will continue to experience these warm waters for the coming weeks,” Ian Enochs, who leads the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Experimental Reef Lab at the University of Miami, told the Tampa Bay Times.

All this heat also bodes ominously for hurricane season, especially with the news this week that Farmers Insurance will move to cancel homeowners policies for more than 100,000 homes across the state due to the rising risks of hurricane season, sea level rise, and other climate disasters.

Currently’s John Morales, author of our daily Miami newsletter, has a helpful video explaining the context of Florida’s record-setting marine heatwave.