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Why It’s Still So Hard To Forecast The Weather

The U.S. experienced 18 separate billion-dollar weather or climate disasters in 2022, costing a total of $165 billion in damages. The disasters were also deadly, causing at least 474 direct or indirect fatalities, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. In the U.S., NOAA is in charge of tracking weather and disseminating forecasts. It’s a complicated job that begins with collecting billions of observations per day on metrics like temperature, wind speed and moisture. This information is then fed into powerful supercomputers that produce weather models that meteorologists use to come up with forecasts. But these models are not perfect. As climate change intensifies extreme weather events, accurate weather forecasting is becoming more important than ever. It’s why a new generation of private companies have cropped up to provide paying customers with hyperlocal, hyperspecific weather forecasting and data. The weather forecasting services industry in the U.S. was estimated to be worth about $17.4 billion in 2023, according to IBISWorld. CNBC spoke with two such companies, Boston-based Tomorrow.io and Alameda, California-based Saildrone, to learn how their technology can help improve weather forecasting for NOAA and others. Chapters: 00:00 — Introduction 02:13 — Weather forecasting 07:39 — Tomorrow.io 10:53 — Saildrone 13:56 — Forecasting future Produced, Shot and Edited by: Magdalena Petrova Animation: Jason Reginato, Christina Locopo Supervising Producer: Shawn Baldwin Additional Footage: Saildrone, Tomorrow.io, Getty Images, U.S. Navy, NOAA Additional Sources: Smithsonian Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times
Wed, 29 Mar 2023 16:00:25 GMT