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NWS Aviation Weather Forecasting
Critical To Air Flight Safety
To fly or not to fly? That is
the question pilots and air traffic controllers answer thousands
of times each month. In recent years, a record number of commercial
flights crisscrossed the American skies, and the travel industry
expects the numbers to increase. The latest weather forecast
is crucial in making the right decisions about whether to fly,
or land. NOAA's National Weather
Service uses a combination of high-technology and skilled
meteorologists to develop aviation weather forecasts for each
flight in the United States, and for two-thirds of air traffic
around the globe.
Aviation Weather Forecasting
Behind-the-Scenes
The NWS issues a total average of nearly 4,000 aviation weather
forecasts each day. The 121 NWS weather forecast offices issue
close to 2,500 aviation weather forecasts to 537 airports around
the nation every day. The local offices also issue nearly 1,300
en route flight forecasts a day. Meteorologists at the Aviation
Weather Center (AWC) in Kansas City, Mo., and the Alaska
Aviation Weather Unit (AAWU) in Anchorage issue a combined
275 weather productsforecasts, warnings and advisoriesdaily.
Additionally, Center Weather
Service Unit meteorologists, positioned at 21 FAA Air Route Traffic
Control Centers across the country, provide in-person guidance
to air traffic controllers about threatening weather conditions
as they happen.
In Anchorage, the AAWU's forecasts
cover Alaska, parts of the North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea and
Arctic Ocean, extending to the North Pole and a large area of
northeast Russia. Elliott Barske, the Meteorologist-in-Charge
at the AAWU, says "with so much of the region's economy
dependent on flying, it is crucial that decision makers have
aviation weather forecasts they can trust."
Creating Aviation Weather
Forecasts
To generate aviation weather forecasts, meteorologists at the
AWC and AAWU use images from satellites circling the globe, improved
model data from NOAA's National
Centers for Environmental Prediction, real-time weather data
from Doppler
radar and Automated
Surface Observation System units at America's airports. ASOS
provides minute-by-minute updates on vital weather information,
including cloud heights, wind speed and precipitation. That information
is available to forecasters around the clock.
Aviation Weather History At
A Glance
After the Wright Brothers' historic flights of 1903, the nation
was awestruck by planes soaring through the air. Years later,
on Dec. 1, 1918, the National Weather Service, then called the
U.S. Weather Bureau, issued its first aviation weather forecastfor
the Aerial Mail Service route from New York to Chicago. On May
20, 1926, Congress passed the Air Commerce Act, which included
legislation directing the Weather Bureau to "furnish weather
reports, forecasts, warnings...to promote the safety and efficiency
of air navigation in the United States."
Mark Andrews, chief of the NWS Aviation Weather Services Branch
says, "Back then, the early forecasters had little experience
with aviation weather phenomena of thunderstorms, fog, low clouds,
icing and turbulence that impact today's flights."
Andrews adds that advanced computer
technology, combined with the skill and experience of meteorologists,
have helped improve the speed, accuracy and quality of aviation
forecasts, which are critical for flight safety. "Air traffic
controllers and pilots are receiving more information today than
ever before, which helps them make smarter decisions about whether
to fly in marginal weather."
New Technology, Techniques
Drive Aviation Forecasts
The NWS uses a broad range of new technology, including Internet
chat rooms, that result in faster, more accurate aviation forecasts.
After a two-year test, the Collaborative
Convective Forecast Product, created by the AWC, became operational
on April 1, 2000, in time for the spring/summer thunderstorm
season. The CCFPan interactive forecast technique that
allows meteorologists from the AWC, FAA and the airlines to agree
on a weather forecast in an Internet chat roomprovides
extended outlooks of up to six hours and aims to reduce weather-related
flight delays and cancellations. The NWS also is using more technology
to develop new products that would continue its momentum of improving
aviation weather forecasts and strengthening its commitment to
meeting the needs of the aviation community.
The AWC recently introduced the
"Aviation Test Bed," giving the center the capability
to test new forecast products from the research community. "From
this research, we expect greater skills in forecasting turbulence,
thunderstorms and icing," says Jim Henderson, the AWC's
deputy director.
On The Horizon
While the NWS and FAA continue to fine-tune the CCFP, another
aviation weather forecast tool in development is the National
Convective Weather Forecast. Once it is ready, this forecast
product will take the current radar tracks of storms and project
where they will be one hour later. It will be automatically updated
every five minutes and give forecasters more focused and precise
weather data to make better aviation forecasts.
For more information contact
National Weather Service
Public Affairs at (301) 713-0622.
NOAA
Public Affairs
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Updated: January 2002 |