Title: NOAAs National Weather Service
1NOAAsNational Weather Service
- Serving the Nations
- Environmental Forecasting Needs
NWS 101 Presentation
2Weather Impacts on Society
3NWS Mission
"The National Weather Service (NWS) provides
weather, hydrologic, and climate forecasts and
warnings for the United States, its
territories,
adjacent waters and ocean areas, for the
protection of life and property and the
enhancement of the national economy. NWS
data and products form a national
information
database and infrastructure which can be
used
by other governmental agencies, the
private
sector, the public, and the global
community."
4NOAAs National Weather Service
- A Typical Year Brings
- 6 Atlantic Hurricanes
- 1,270 Tornadoes
- 5,000 Floods
- 10,000 Violent Thunderstorms
- Severe Winter Storms
- Drought and Large Wildfires
- Excessive Heat Episodes
- 600 Deaths 5,000 Injuries 14 Billion in Losses
- Provide climate, water, weather forecasts and
warnings to protect life and property and enhance
the economy - 76 billion observations
- 1.5 million forecasts
- 50,000 warnings
5Overview of NWS Operations
Observe
Respond Feedback
Distribute
Products Services
Process
Feedback
6NWS Organizational Structure
Office of the Assistant Administrator For Weather
Services
Strategic Planningand Policy
Eastern Region
Central Region
Southern Region
Western Region
Alaska Region
Pacific Region
National Centers for Environmental
Prediction (NCEP)
EEO/Diversity
23 WFOs
38 WFOs
32 WFOs
24 WFOs
3 WFOs
2 WFOs
InternationalActivities
Environmental Modeling Center
Hydro- meteorological Prediction Center
1 RFC
3 RFCs
2 RFCs
4 RFCs
3 RFCs
6 WSOs
Communications Office
4 CWSUs
5 CWSUs
7 CWSUs
4 CWSUs
1 CWSU
12 WSOs
1 WSO
2 WSOs
Storm Prediction Center
Tropical Prediction Center (National
Hurricane Center)
Office of theChief InformationOfficer
Office of Climate, Water, Weather Services
Office of Operational Systems
Office of Science Technology
Office of Hydrologic Development
Office of theChief Financial Officer
Ocean Prediction Center
Central Operations
Climate Prediction Center
Field Systems Operations Center
Telecommunications Operations Center
Hydrologic Services Division
Programs andPlans Division
Planning,Programming Coordination Group
Aviation Weather Center
Space Weather PredictionCenter
Climate Services Division
Radar Operations Center
Meteorological Development Laboratory
Hydrology Laboratory
Operations and Requirements Division
Systems Engineering Center
National Data Buoy Center
Observing Services Division
Maintenance,Logistics, andAcquisition Division
- 4,900 NWS Employees
- 122 Weather Forecast Offices
- 13 River Forecast Centers
- 21 Center Weather Service Units
- 21 Weather Service Offices
- 2 Tsunami Warning Centers
- 9 NCEP Centers
- 6 Regional Headquarters
Meteorological Services Division
Performance and Awareness Division
Training Division
7NWS Overview Facilities
8NWS OverviewWeather Forecast Offices (WFOs)
- Issue all Local Forecastsand Warnings
- Build and Maintain RelationshipsWith Local and
State Governments - Provide Expert Advice toEmergency Operations
Centers - Solicit Customer Feedback on Products and
Services - Conduct Community Awareness and Education
Programs - Train Volunteer Observers and Storm Spotters
9NWS OverviewRiver Forecast Centers (RFCs)
- Issue river, reservoir and flood forecasts based
on computer models - Provide forecast guidance to Weather Forecast
Offices (WFOs) - Work with water managers
10NWS OverviewNational Centers
11Where Were Headed
- Data, Products, and Services to
- Greatly reduce loss of life and injury
- Enable communities to mitigate property loss well
in advance of threatening conditions - Alert economic sectorsto environmental
riskswith sufficient lead timeto limit or avoid
impacts
12Where Were Headed
- Integrated Surface Observing System (ISOS)
- ASOS
- Cooperative Observers (COOP)
- COOP-Modernization
- National Mesonet
13Where Were Headed
- Severe Weather
- Warn-On Forecasts Tornado warning lead time
increases from an average of 13 minutes today to
as much as 1 hour - Severe Thunderstorm Warning lead time increases
from an average of 18 minutes to as much as 2
hours
- Enables Emergency Managers to energize community
response - Lives saved and millions in savings
14Where Were Headed
- Tropical Cyclone Services
- Warning lead time for landfall increases from
less than 24 hours to 3 days - 50 reduction in intensity error
- 50 reduction in track error
- Saves lives/enhances public safety
- Improves response capability of emergency
managers - Mitigates property loss
- Economic impact increasingly complex (coastal
development.)
15Where Were Headed
- Aviation Weather Services
- Aviation forecasts to exceed 80 accuracy
- New metric with FAA to determine weather impact
on operations - Weather support for Next Generation Air
Transportation System - New Weather Information Database
- FAA REDAC report indicates 2/3 of NAS weather
delays Preventable10 reduction translates to
savings of 600M/year - Reduce general aviation weather-related
fatalities by 25
16Where Were Headed
- Space Weather Services
- Seamless integration of space weather into our
suite of products and services - Meeting new space weather service needs of
fast-growing customer base
- Building hazard-resilient communities is
NOAA-wide priority - High-tech communities should be hazard resilient
as well
17Where Were Headed
- Winter Weather Services
- Improved global and regional models
- Increased use of ensembles for forecast
uncertainty and storm potential - New Impact-based products
- Storm-Based Winter Weather Warnings
- Warning lead time for major winter storms days in
advance - Billions in Savings
- Improve Transportation Safety
18Where Were Headed
- Climate Services
- Climate information demands increasing
- High quality observations
- Improved seasonal to inter-annual prediction
- Downscaled products and services to regionaland
local levels - Entire Weather and Climate Enterprise must work
together to meet these challenges - NWS committed to doing our part
- Improve Preparation for and Response to Heat
Waves, Drought, Coastal Inundation, and Other
Phenomena - Relevant and Reliable Climate Data Will Stimulate
Private Development of Technologies and
Applications
19Where Were Headed
- Water Resource Services
- Provide high-resolution water quantity, quality,
and soil moisture forecasts - Emergency and resource managers mitigate losses
for conditions ranging from droughts to floods
- Enables NOAA to meet our Nation's growing needs
for water forecasts - Provides forecasts for consumption resources
- Provides important resource protection
capabilities
20Where Were Headed
- Ecosystem Impact Information
- Provide forecasts of weather, water, and climate
impacts for management decisions - Management decisions reflect relationships among
humans, nonhuman species, and the environments in
which they live
- Benefits through innovative approaches to spill
preparedness, incident response, fire support,
damage assessments and restoration - NOAA contributes approximately 75 million annual
to the U.S. economy
21Where Were Headed
- Forecast Uncertainty Information
- Integral and essential part of all forecasts
- Enterprise-wide partnership to generate and
communicate forecast uncertainty to decision
makers and public - Expressed in terms of probabilities
22The Future Integrated Environmental Awareness
Saving Lives Through Partnerships
NOAA TEAM
END USERS
PARTNERS
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