The U.S. government is closed. This site will not be updated; however, NOAA websites and social media channels necessary to protect lives and property will be maintained. To learn more, visit commerce.gov.
For the latest forecasts and critical weather information, visit weather.gov.
Four Oshen C-Stars departing St. Thomas on the back of a deployment vessel for future observations of Atlantic hurricanes. Credit: Oshen
As the 2025 hurricane season ramps up, NOAA will be testing small, uncrewed instrumented sailboats built by a robotics company to capture weather and ocean data in the path of tropical storms. The observations from these robots will help scientists understand how hurricanes do or don't intensify, which helps meteorologists provide better hurricane forecasts.
NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory will be playing a critical role in the mission. Its Science Data Integration Group (SDIG) receives data from NOAA-contracted Uncrewed Surface Vehicles. With support from NOAA's Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing Program, and Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, SDIG invented and custom-built automated processes that receive data, assess data integrity, and distribute data within minutes on the World Meteorological Organization's (WMO's) Global Telecommunications System (GTS) for use by NOAA and global operational weather forecast centers.
That's just one of the key services developed by PMEL's SDIG. This group is the foundation of PMEL's data management... more
A specialized plane, camera and a crew of four are in Alaska to understand the ecosystems of the Bering and Chukchi seas. UW CICOES / NOAA PMEL scientist Jiaxu Zhang, the ArcticAIR project lead, is quoted.
[Podcast] Today on Future Tense on ABC Radio National, we'll look at the progress of two ocean-related initiatives, efforts where nations, non-governed organizations, and companies, are coming together to build a framework for how we regulate and protect...
The quake in Russia on Wednesday was among the strongest ever recorded — but in many places, the resulting wave was small.
A researcher with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory collects samples from Sequim Bay, Washington that will be analyzed for total alkalinity and dissolved inorganic carbon measurements during the February 2025 alkalinity release experiment. Credit: Nick Ward, PNNL
Carefully enhanced wastewater could one day benefit coastal marine resources
The continual rise of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere isn't just changing weather patterns, it's also silently altering the chemistry of the global... more