DOGE weather data

Navy Replacing Old Weather Data System with New, Modern Alternatives

Effective July 31st, the Navy’s Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center ceased sharing satellite weather data with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), including data from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP). This transition is permanent, and is a result of the phasing out of the aging DMSP system, which had been providing NOAA with crucial global imagery of weather patterns. NOAA will now rely on data from the newer Weather System Follow-on Microwave (WSF-M) and Electro-Optical Weather System (EWS) to ensure ongoing weather monitoring capabilities. While the loss of DMSP data may seem impactful, it is part of a larger modernization effort to provide more accurate weather predictions.

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DOGE’s NOAA Lease Cancellation Threatens US Weather Forecasting

DOGE moves to cancel NOAA leases on key weather buildings, a decision that’s sparking widespread outrage and raising serious concerns about the future of weather forecasting in the United States. This action, seemingly driven by a desire to transition to paid weather services, ignores the fundamental reality that all these paid services rely on the publicly available data generated by NOAA. Eliminating free access to this data would effectively cripple the nation’s weather forecasting capabilities.

This move echoes a long-standing conflict, reminiscent of the account detailed in Michael Lewis’s book, concerning the desire by some private companies to monetize weather data – to charge both the government and the public for access to information previously provided freely.… Continue reading