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  • Currently en Puerto Rico — 30 de junio, 2023: Aguaceros y tronadas dispersas del sureste al noroeste

Currently en Puerto Rico — 30 de junio, 2023: Aguaceros y tronadas dispersas del sureste al noroeste

El tiempo, currently.

Aguaceros y tronadas dispersas del sureste al noroeste

La onda tropical que ha provocado aguaceros y tronadas el miércoles y el jueves partirá hacia el oeste el viernes y será sustituida por una zona de aire seco con una alta concentración de polvo sahariano. Algunos aguaceros persistirán el viernes a lo largo de la costa sureste de Puerto Rico, y algunas tronadas también se desarrollarán durante la tarde en el interior y noroeste. Para el sábado, los cielos estarán más soleados pero brumosos, y la actividad de lluvia será limitada. Al mismo tiempo, las temperaturas subirán una vez más a los rangos bajo a medio de los 90 grados durante el fin de semana. Humedad adicional podría generar riesgos de calor excesivo en el oeste, norte y este.

—John Toohey-Morales

What you can do, currently.

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Our annual summer membership drive is underway — with a goal to double our membership base over the next six weeks which will guarantee this service can continue throughout this year’s hurricane season. We’ll need 739 new members by July 31 to make this goal happen.

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What you need to know, currently.

For the first time in nearly four years, the state of Colorado is drought-free.

Last May, drought covered more than 93% of the state. That number is now down to 0%, according to the latest Drought Monitor. This is great news for a state that has defined the western drought for decades, complete with wintertime wildfires, decimated snowpack, and a plunging Colorado River.

The turnaround is not without its downsides, of course. Waves of severe weather, hailstorms, and flooding have struck the Denver metro area in recent weeks with more than 200% of normal rainfall so far this year.

The next three years are critical for the future trajectory of Colorado, and of the entire Colorado River basin, as federal officials have begun a process to renegotiate with states on new rules governing water use over 250,000 square miles (650,000 sq km).

In the future, large scale rewilding efforts to reintroduce wolves, beavers, and other keystone species of healthy wetlands in the Rocky Mountains show promise if coupled with efforts to phase out water-intensive industrial-scale agriculture and ranching in these sensitive areas.