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A satellite program that has historically been a key source of weather forecasting data will be discontinued no later than ...
Weather experts are warning that hurricane forecasts will be severely hampered by the upcoming cutoff of key data from U.S. Department of Defense satellites, the latest Trump administration move with ...
Meteorologists are losing a sophisticated tool that has proved invaluable when monitoring and forecasting hurricanes.
On Monday, the U.S. Department of Defense announced it would immediately stop ingesting, processing, and transmitting data essential to most hurricane forecasts.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says it is delaying by one month the planned cutoff of satellite data ...
Earlier this month, the Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said it would discontinue the “ingest, processing and ...
The loss of access to the data could hamstring forecasters’ ability to track hurricanes and warn residents of their risk.
Cuts at NOAA mean fewer hurricane-hunter aircrafts will be gathering real time data on developing storms and that the team developing computer models for forecasts will be "gutted," insiders say.
The government cuts key data used in hurricane forecasting, and experts sound an alarm It's the latest Trump administration move with potential consequences for the quality of forecasting.
When Hurricane Otis was headed for Mexico's Pacific coast in 2023, Pilié said one of the only reasons forecasters knew it was undergoing rapid intensification was because of microwave data.
The government cuts key data used in hurricane forecasting, and experts sound an alarm It's the latest Trump administration move with potential consequences for the quality of forecasting.
Weather experts are warning that hurricane forecasts will be severely hampered by the upcoming cutoff of key data from U.S. Department of Defense satellites, the latest Trump administration move ...
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