Puerto Vallarta News

Puerto Vallarta News

Restoring Mexico’s mangroves can shield shores, store carbon

When a rotten egg smell rises from the mangrove swamps of southeast Mexico, something is going well. It means that this key coastal habitat for blunting hurricane impacts has recovered and is capturing carbon dioxide — the main ingredient of global warming.

While world leaders seek ways to stop the climate crisis at a United Nations conference in Scotland this month, one front in the battle to save the planet’s mangroves is thousands of miles (kilometers) away on Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula.

Decades ago, mangroves lined these shores, but today there are only thin green . . .

Read Full Story

Related Posts

Mexico tourism GDP rises 0.4% in Q3 2025, INEGI shows

Mexico tourism GDP rises 0.4% in Q3 2025, INEGI shows

INEGI data show Mexico’s tourism GDP grew 0.4% in Q3 2025 as goods strengthened and...
US Offers $34M for Michoacán Cartel Leaders, Mexico Silent

US Offers $34M for Michoacán Cartel Leaders, Mexico Silent

The U.S. is offering a combined $34 million in rewards for Michoacán cartel leaders, even...
Cancun airport upgrade

Cancún airport ends 19-month dip in international traffic

ASUR data show Cancún’s international passenger traffic rose 2.2% in January 2026, the first year-over-year...
SEAPAL Repairs 139 Leaks, Steps Up Vallarta Service

SEAPAL Repairs 139 Leaks, Steps Up Vallarta Service

SEAPAL Vallarta repaired 139 leaks and logged 351 street actions Feb 2–8, including fast water...