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NOAA's NWS Focus
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| September 23, 2003 |
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Historic hydrometeorological
data (as shown above) from many countries is at
risk of being lost to mold, mildew, rot, and poor
storage. These paper records are irreplaceable
and contain weather and climate information vital
to the sciences of meteorology, hydrology, and
climatology. The NWS and NESDIS have formed a partnership
called the "Africa Upper-Air Data Rescue Project" to
find, rescue, and convert these paper records to
a digital format. Read more about how some of the
world's most vulnerable data is being saved by
clicking here.
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Editor's
Note:
NDFD Customers?
Is your office reaching
out to a variety of customers and showing them the benefits
of the National Digital Forecast Database (NDFD)? Are you finding
customers who are coming up with unique uses of NDFD information,
or are you reaching out to non-traditional customers? Tell
us your NDFD outreach success stories and we'll compile them
for readers in an upcoming issue of NWS.Focus.
E-mail us at NWS.Focus@noaa.gov.
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NWS Deputy Director
Explains Emergency Response Role for Save A Life Foundation
By
Patrick Slattery
Public Affairs Specialist
NWS Central Region Headquarters
Noting the "natural
good fit" of NOAA with the Save
A Life Foundation in times of need, NWS Deputy Director
John Jones recently described the agency's role in disaster
mitigation to this organization's National Emergency Preparedness
Summit in Chicago, IL, on September 16, 2003.
"We are your partners
in preparedness," Jones told the audience of teachers, emergency
responders, and emergency managers. "Our goal is to provide
you with products and services that help your communities keep
emergencies from becoming disasters."
Jones noted that
the NOAA National Weather Service and the Save A Life Foundation,
working closely with the national Citizen
Corps, form a good fit in the partnership of keeping the
public safe (NOAA became a Citizen Corps co-partner in July).
He pointed out that NOAA satellites carry equipment to assist
with search and rescue operations; NOAA ship sonar for charting
the ocean bottom also helps find downed aircraft like that
of JFK, Jr., and TWA flight 800; and, NOAA Weather Radio is
now used to carry civil emergency information, including post-disaster
information. He also detailed how NOAA aircraft flew missions
over the World Trade Center after the September 11, 2001, attacks
to produce three-dimensional images that helped recovery and
clean up efforts.
Jones said public
awareness campaigns such as Severe Weather Awareness Week,
Lightning Safety Awareness Week, Turn Around Don't Drown, and
StormReady have been valuable in making the public aware of
self-protective actions needed during emergency situations.
Forecast and communications tools such as the Advanced Hydrologic
Prediction Service, the National Digital Forecast Database,
NOAA Weather Radio, and the Emergency Managers Weather Information
Network (EMWIN), he said, enable NOAA Weather Service experts
to provide the latest information to emergency managers, the
media, and the public.
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Beyond Predictions:
Toward a Full-Service Environmental Agency
By
Gregory A. Mandt
Director, Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Services
The following article
is reprinted from the Summer
AWARE Report.
NOAA's Strategic Plan, "New Priorities for the 21st Century" is
out. The plan includes four mission goals:
- Protect, restore,
and manage the use of coastal and ocean resources through
ecosystem-based management
- Understand climate
variability and change to enhance society's ability to plan
and respond
- Serve society's
needs for weather and water information
- Support the Nation's
commerce with information for safe, efficient, and environmentally
sound transportation.
We in the National
Weather Service should take pride in the fact that our efforts
support all four mission goals. What we do ties into everything
NOAA does. Given the new NOAA Strategic Plan, what does the
future hold for the Weather Service? Ants Leetmaa, from NOAA's
Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton, NJ, gave us a glimpse
of our future challenges. At a briefing to the NWS Corporate
Board, Leetmaa noted the following: Global population will
increase to 9 billion by 2050. About 4 billion people will
live in mega cities with aging populations.
Food needs will
require sustainable increases in food output per hectare of
300 percent. Humans have appropriated 50 percent of the Earth's
primary productivity. We have doubled the global cycling of
nitrogen and impacted the carbon cycle. As society becomes
more complex, we will become more sensitive to both natural-
and human-induced variability. This implies that we in NOAA
and the NWS must look to how we can live in harmony with our
environment while improving our nation's health, ecology, and
economy. NWS observations and predictions can enable us to
remain good environmental stewards. We in the NWS must understand
how our data and information can be used by other NOAA components
and our environmental partners to make sound decisions. Similarly,
we must increase our knowledge of other NOAA services so we
can help our customers and partners better use NOAA capabilities.
Engage, advise,
and inform is one of the NOAA strategies to help us
meet NOAA's four mission goals. The necessity to engage,
advise, and inform takes us beyond predictions. We are expected
to engage our customers and outline the capabilities both
we and NOAA can bring to bear to solve increasingly complex
environmental issues. It's a big job. And, it's going to
get bigger. Engage, advise, and inform is everyone's
responsibility. Our future as a Nation, our quality of life,
and our legacy for generations are riding on the decisions
society makes today. Let's use our capabilities to ensure
our Nation makes the right choices.
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Temperature
Forecasting and Cooperative Modernization Demonstrations
Are Heating Up
A NOAA effort to improve
temperature forecasting in the northeastern United States could
give the energy industry better information for predicting energy
demand in the summer months. This effort includes improved high-resolution
weather prediction models and new observations to improve the accuracy
of those models and better understand regional and local weather
phenomena that strongly influence summer energy demand. Eighty
COOP stations are partially modernized as part of a 200-station,
Congressionally-funded high-resolution temperature forecasting
demonstration project in the New England area. The NWS is preparing
to acquire equipment to modernize additional cooperative observer
(COOP) stations. The NWS will be contracting for the additional
stations in September 2003, according to Daniel Meléndez, meteorologist
with the NWS Office of Science and Technology. He added that installation
of beta test sites is planned for late fall 2004 with installation
of fully modernized COOP stations to begin in spring 2004. The
experiment also includes special, upward-pointing radars, Meléndez
said. "These wind profiling radars provide measurements of the
wind from the ground up to roughly 10,000 feet. Knowledge of low-level
wind patterns is essential for accurate regional forecasts."
Meléndez said the prediction models used experimentally
for the project are able to capture weather features
as small as tens of miles across and take detailed
account of the New England topography and the coastal
zone, both of which influence the weather strongly.
Data from different models provide not only the most
likely forecast but also give the range of possible
weather conditions for the next day or so. Data and
forecasts resulting from the New England project
are available on the web at http://highrestemp.noaa.gov/.
Partners involved in the project include: NOAA's
Forecast Systems, Environmental Technology, and National
Severe Storms Laboratories, the National Centers
for Environmental Prediction, and NWS Weather Forecast
Offices in the Northeast United States.
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NCEP Director
Takes Questions at White House Online Forum
National Centers for
Environmental Prediction Director Louis Uccellini was the guest
for an online question and answer forum called Ask
the White House last week.
As Hurricane Isabel was nearing the Atlantic coast,
Uccellini took questions on hurricanes and forecasting.
Read the transcript here.
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Joint NOAA Project
Underway to Rescue International Hydrometeorological Records
Critical, historic,
hydrometeorological records are being lost every day to mold,
mildew, rodents, and rot in developing countries. The NWS and
NESDIS have formed a partnership to rescue some of the world's
most vulnerable hydrometeorological data. Since early 2000,
this partnership has rescued about 200,000 upper air observations
by getting them stored on CD-ROMs in a digital format.
"These paper records
of past weather and climate are vital to the sciences of meteorology,
hydrology and climatology," said NWS Project Manager Richard
Crouthamel, NWS International Affairs. "They provide baselines
for our global climate models helping to improve the accuracy
of long-range forecasts. They give evidence of climate change
to engineers, agriculturalists, and military planners on extreme
environmental values they must anticipate."
The NOAA project
teams for the "Africa Upper-Air Data Rescue Project" find,
rescue, and transfer paper observational records to digital
format. NOAA teams have traveled to six African countries (Kenya,
Malawi, Mozambique, Niger, Senegal and Zambia) to help the
National Meteorological Services (NMS) of these countries prepare
historic upper-air records for rescue using personal computers
and digital cameras to preserve the entire original, paper-based
observations (some complete with coffee stains) forever.
Crouthamel notes
that once a CD-ROM is filled with observation photos of the
paper documents, a copy is sent to NOAA's World Data Center,
part of the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) in Asheville,
NC. When the CDs arrive, the observation images are checked
for legibility and stored for later digitization. Once this
process is completed, the data will be added to the NCDC data
base for access by the world community.
"We have rescued
a lot of upper-air observations, however over 20,000,000 surface
observations remain at risk in those six countries alone," reports
Claudia Liautaud, Assistant Project Manager for Data Rescue,
NWS International Affairs. "Can you imagine how many are at
risk worldwide?"
Participating African
NMS Directors continue to praise the NWS and NESDIS for their
efforts, according to Crouthamel. Once the data becomes a part
of the NCDC data base, all sorts of applications from research
to improving operational forecasts can be derived from this
massive undertaking. He added that the tragedy of losing data
occurs all over the world. "It is important to save this vital
information for the health, safety, and well being of every
living thing on our planet. These records are vital to the
sciences of meteorology, hydrology, and climatology."
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Forecast Office
Promoting Lightning Safety in High School Athletic Programs
As part of NOAA's educational
efforts to promote lightning safety, the Gray, ME, Weather Forecast
Office (WFO) has developed and is distributing a "Coach's
and Sports Official's Guide to Lightning Safety" to high school
athletic directors throughout Maine and New Hampshire.
Warning Coordination Meteorologist John Jensenius
said the office's goal is to get this important
safety information to each outdoor high school
coach in the two states.
Each of the 100 school districts in New Hampshire
and 150 school districts in Maine will receive
a packet of 25 tri-fold brochures. In New Hampshire,
the brochures were distributed September 15, 2003,
at the state meeting of high school athletic directors.
In Maine, the brochures will be distributed at
a similar meeting in April. In addition to the
brochures, the WFO will give each high school athletic
director a copy of NOAA's most recent "Lightning
Kills, Play It Safe" poster. WFO Gray also plans
to provide lightning safety brochures and posters
to other sports groups during the next several
months.
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Take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA
Weekly Report
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Click
here to take a look at NOAA-wide employee news, as posted
in the latest issue of AccessNOAA
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Send
questions and comments to NWS.Communications.Office@noaa.gov
or mail to:
National Weather
Service
Communications Office
ATTN: W/COM
1325 East West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3283
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