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- Currently en Puerto Rico — 18 de septiembre, 2023: Se prolonga el calor de verano
Currently en Puerto Rico — 18 de septiembre, 2023: Se prolonga el calor de verano
Se prolonga el calor de verano
El calor será la mayor preocupación para Puerto Rico otra vez el lunes. Las temperaturas alcanzarán los rangos alto de los 80 y bajo de los 90 grados cerca de las costas y los rangos alto de los 70 y bajo de los 80 en las montañas. Se emitirán nuevamente Advertencias de Calor para las áreas noroeste, noreste, este y el este del interior de la isla, Avisos de Calor Excesivo serán necesarios para el centro-norte de Puerto Rico, Culebra y Vieques, donde los índices de calor superarán los 112 grados. En términos de lluvia, se esperan condiciones similares a las del domingo, con aguaceros matutinos aislados o dispersos y actividad más extensa por la tarde en el interior y el oeste, incluidas tronadas fuertes. El Centro Nacional de Huracanes está monitoreando la tormenta tropical Nigel que no representa ninguna amenaza para Puerto Rico, afectando solo la dirección del viento y las condiciones marinas esta semana.
—John Toohey-Morales
What you need to know, currently.
The State of California filed a lawsuit on Friday against the five largest oil companies and their lobbyists, alleging that they deliberately misled the public to protect their profits — putting lives at risk and worsening extreme weather, creating billions of dollars of damage in the process.
"Oil and gas companies have privately known the truth for decades — that the burning of fossil fuels leads to climate change — but have fed us lies and mistruths to further their record-breaking profits at the expense of our environment. Enough is enough," said Rob Bonta, California's attorney general.
The lawsuit pits the largest US economy against the heart of the global fossil fuel system — and is analogous to the recent successful lawsuits against utility companies in California for their role in sparking deadly wildfires. This time, California is demanding the oil companies pay their share of damages to the state for their decades of lies.
Meanwhile, on Sunday, in the largest climate march since Covid, more than 75,000 people rallied in NYC explicitly to end the era of fossil fuels. The demands were clear: President Biden must declare a climate emergency and take immediate action to wind down fossil fuel production and use throughout the economy. And that work needs to be done with climate justice at its center.
Here’s AOC’s full speech at Sunday’s global climate march to end fossil fuels in NYC:
It’s happening, y’all.
What you can do, currently.
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One of my favorite organizations, Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, serves as a hub of mutual aid efforts focused on climate action in emergencies — like hurricane season. Find mutual aid network near you and join, or donate to support existing networks: