• Currently Puerto Rico
  • Posts
  • Currently en Puerto Rico — 21 de septiembre, 2023: Siguen las tronadas en las tardes

Currently en Puerto Rico — 21 de septiembre, 2023: Siguen las tronadas en las tardes

Siguen las tronadas en las tardes

Tronadas vespertinas continuarán durante toda la semana, con un aumento en la actividad el viernes cuando una onda tropical pase hacia el sur de Puerto Rico, e incluso más hacia el final de la semana cuando una zona de aire muy húmedo se mueva a través del Caribe. Estas tronadas producirán fuertes ráfagas y lluvias intensas que, por acumulación durante varios días, provocarán inundaciones en zonas urbanas y quebradas, crecidas repentinas de ríos y deslizamientos de tierra en zonas de terreno escarpado. La lluvia y la cobertura de nubes brindarán alivio de las temperaturas tan calientes, con máximas desde el rango medio de los 70 grados en los picos de las montañas hasta alrededor de 90 grados en elevaciones bajas y áreas urbanas. Pero los altos niveles de humedad contribuirán a índices de calor superiores a 108 grados a lo largo de la costa centro norte.

—John Toohey-Morales

What you need to know, currently.

On Wednesday, President Biden announced the creation of the American Climate Corps — a bucket-list item for youth climate organizers for years.

CNN has more on the backstory, but suffice it to say that a climate corps was originally a Bernie Sanders pledge when he was running for president. It was then part of the Build Back Better plan during the initial Covid response, but got cut — and then it was also part of Joe Manchin’s Inflation Reduction Act — and got cut.

Now it’s a reality, by executive order. So this is a big deal.

Here’s the options for training with the American Climate Corps, according to the brand-new White House signup form:

  • Deploy low-cost, reliable, clean energy

  • Implement energy-efficient solutions to help families save money on their energy bills

  • Rebuild coastal wetlands to protect coastal communities from storm surges and flooding

  • Manage forests to prevent catastrophic wildfires

  • Protect America’s public lands and waters for future generations

  • Enhance agricultural systems to protect natural resources and conserve water during droughts

  • Advance environmental justice to ensure all Americans live in healthy, thriving communities

What you can do, currently.

Currently Sponsorships are short messages we co-write with you to plug your org, event, or climate-friendly business with Currently subscribers. It’s a chance to boost your visibility with Currently — one of the world’s largest daily climate newsletters — and support independent climate journalism, all at the same time. Starting at just $105.

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: