Issue Apr 10-16 2024: Environmental activist Eleuterio Martínez demands “total protection” for the Baní Dunes of the Dominican Republic.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Apr 10-16 2024: Every year 350 million tons of plastic are created, of which 8 or 9 million end up in the ocean, posing a threat to both marine and human health.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Apr 03-09 2024: There is a shortage of drinking water in at least 15 Indigenous communities in Michoacán, Mexico, specifically in the Purepecha region and the Mazahua zone in Hidalgo.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Apr 03-09 2024: In 2023, deforestation decreased by 25% to 35% compared to 2022, according to Environment Minister of Colombia, Susana Muhamad.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Apr 03-09 2024: An artificial incubation laboratory in the Parque Nacional Laguna del Tigre in Guatemala reported the birth of the first Cyanoptera macaw of 2024.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Mar 27-Apr 02 2024: The Coquimbo Region in Chile is facing a “humanitarian catastrophe,” with lack of rainfall leading to dire water shortages impacting both residence and agricultural production alike.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Mar 27-Apr 02 2024: Panama’s National Secretary of Energy created Operación Solar, a pilot program which seeks to democratize access to solar energy in the country.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Mar 27-Apr 02 2024: Presented at the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, the initiative “Football for Forests” seeks both to promote a restoration project in one of the municipalities most affected by deforestation in the Amazon, and to continue with others already underway in the same region.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Mar 20-26 2024: The death of Ana Júlia, a six-meter anaconda well known by locals and tour guides in the Brazilian municipality of Bonito, has shocked the local community.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Mar 20-26 2024: The president of the National Administration of Aqueducts and Sewage Systems (ANDA), Rubén Alemán, said that the ten wells that dried up in San Salvador were due to “climate phenomena.”
Read More- Published in Environment


