Home WebMail
| Calgary 3°C
Regions Advertise Login Contact
Action News Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Canada
  • US
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Breaking
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • Breaking
  • Latest
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • White House confirms two-week suspension of strikes on Iran
  • Trump agrees to pause attacks on Iran if Strait of Hormuz opens
  • Billionaire investor Ackman makes $64bn bid for Universal Music Group
  • Trump announces two-week ceasefire as Iran agrees to reopen Hormuz Strait
  • What we know about Pakistan’s proposed Iran war pause
  • Iranian musician stages protest at power station over Trump threats
  • Arsenal beat Sporting with late Havertz goal in Champions League quarters
  • Djibouti and the Horn of Africa: new front in the war on Iran
  • Iran warns region and beyond as tension builds ahead of US ultimatum
  • Pakistan appeals to Trump to extend deadline, Iran to reopen Hormuz Strait
  • Kane leads Bayern to 2-1 win over Real Madrid in Champions League thriller
  • Protesters in Iraq swarm Kuwaiti consulate after deadly rocket attack
  • Iranians brace for possible devastation as Trump’s deadline looms
  • How is the US-Israel war on Iran affecting Russian-Iranian relations?
  • Barcelona’s Flick to defend ’emotional’ teen Lamine Yamal against criticism
  • Libyan financier enabled ‘$300m in loans’ for Haftar’s Tripoli offensive
  • Palestinians queue for hours in pouring rain to get bread
  • ‘Policy of abuse’: Women march in Cuba against US energy blockade
  • Russia and China block UN resolution on Strait of Hormuz
  • Pope Leo slams Trump’s threat that Iran’s ‘civilisation will die’
  • Mediterranean migrant deaths mounting towards 1,000 in 2026: UN
  • FIFA opens disciplinary probe against Spanish FA after Islamaphobic chants
  • Massive fire engulfs oil storage tanks near Baghdad
  • ‘No end in sight’ if Trump acts on threat to destroy Iran infrastructure
  • Trump to pursue stability with China’s Xi in May meeting, USTR Greer says
  • White House confirms two-week suspension of strikes on Iran
  • Trump agrees to pause attacks on Iran if Strait of Hormuz opens
  • Billionaire investor Ackman makes $64bn bid for Universal Music Group
  • Trump announces two-week ceasefire as Iran agrees to reopen Hormuz Strait
  • What we know about Pakistan’s proposed Iran war pause
  • Iranian musician stages protest at power station over Trump threats
  • Arsenal beat Sporting with late Havertz goal in Champions League quarters
  • Djibouti and the Horn of Africa: new front in the war on Iran
  • Iran warns region and beyond as tension builds ahead of US ultimatum
  • Pakistan appeals to Trump to extend deadline, Iran to reopen Hormuz Strait
  • Kane leads Bayern to 2-1 win over Real Madrid in Champions League thriller
  • Protesters in Iraq swarm Kuwaiti consulate after deadly rocket attack
  • Iranians brace for possible devastation as Trump’s deadline looms
  • How is the US-Israel war on Iran affecting Russian-Iranian relations?
  • Barcelona’s Flick to defend ’emotional’ teen Lamine Yamal against criticism
  • Libyan financier enabled ‘$300m in loans’ for Haftar’s Tripoli offensive
  • Palestinians queue for hours in pouring rain to get bread
  • ‘Policy of abuse’: Women march in Cuba against US energy blockade
  • Russia and China block UN resolution on Strait of Hormuz
  • Pope Leo slams Trump’s threat that Iran’s ‘civilisation will die’
  • Mediterranean migrant deaths mounting towards 1,000 in 2026: UN
  • FIFA opens disciplinary probe against Spanish FA after Islamaphobic chants
  • Massive fire engulfs oil storage tanks near Baghdad
  • ‘No end in sight’ if Trump acts on threat to destroy Iran infrastructure
  • Trump to pursue stability with China’s Xi in May meeting, USTR Greer says
Photos: Climate change puts Cuba’s agriculture under threat

Photos: Climate change puts Cuba’s agriculture under threat

The climate crisis is causing longer droughts, more intense storms, and higher sea levels in the Caribbean island.

By Al Jazeera Published 2022-11-13 08:23 Updated 2022-11-13 08:23 2 min read Source: Al Jazeera
Explained Human Rights Science & Technology Climate Crisis

Like the rest of the Caribbean, Cuba is suffering from longer droughts, warmer waters, more intense storms, and higher sea levels because of climate change. The rainy season, already problematic for farmers, has gotten longer and wetter.

Agriculture has long been a relative bright spot in Cuba’s struggling economy. The socialist government has been relatively liberal with food producers, allowing them to pursue their economic interests more openly than others in Cuba.

Cuba has ample sun, water and soil – the basic ingredients needed to grow plants and feed animals. By changing the way nature functions in the Caribbean, however, climate change is tinkering with the raw elements of productivity.

Cubans are leaving the island in the highest numbers in decades.

United States authorities encountered nearly 221,000 Cubans on the US-Mexico border in the 2022 fiscal year. It was a 471 percent increase from the year before, according to US Customs and Border Protection.

As with everything in Cuba, the outflow is being driven by a complex mix of domestic management of politics and the economy, and relations with the US and other countries.

A part of what’s driving the flow is climate change, which cost Cuba $65.85bn in gross domestic product between 1990 and 2014 alone, 9 percent of its total GDP, according to Dartmouth College.

“Caribbean economies, tourism, agriculture and fishing, are at the forefront” of climate change, Donovan Campbell, a climate-change expert at Jamaica’s University of the West Indies, told The Associated Press.

A Category 3 hurricane, Ian, ravaged western Cuba at the end of September, killing three people, destroying 14,000 homes, damaging the power network and destroying Cuba’s most-valued tobacco fields.

Cuba was already in one of its worst economic, political and energy crises in decades, due to the coronavirus pandemic and the Russian war with Ukraine, among other factors.

Cuba had said that it would get nearly a quarter of its energy from renewable sources by 2030. But so far, the country gets little more than 5 percent of its energy from renewables and still depends on oil from allies Venezuela and Russia.

The US trade embargo “impedes us from accessing the resources we could have that would make it possible for us to recover from these events as quickly as possible,” said Adianez Taboada, vice minister of Cuba’s Science, Technology and Environment Ministry.

Share this page

  • 𝕏 X/Twitter
  • 🔗 LinkedIn
  • 📘 Facebook
  • 💬 WhatsApp
  • ✉️ Email
Action News logo

Action News

A division of WestNet Continental Broadcasting

About

Part of WestNet N.A.

Action.News

Network

  • WestNet News
  • Advertise With Us
  • RSS Feed
  • Atom Feed

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Action News Code of Ethics
  • Editorial Policies
  • Corrections Policy

Connect

  • Facebook.com/ActionNews
  • YouTube
  • Twitch
  • WhatsApp
  • Submit a News Tip
  • Contact the Newsroom

© 2026 WestNet-HD, A Division of WN Continental Broadcasting. All Rights Reserved.

Action News™ and WestNet News are registered trademarks of WN Continental Broadcasting in the United States and Canada. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Home Breaking Canada Sports Search
🔴 LIVE
Action News Live ✖
🔊 Click to unmute