Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Outbreak lockdown will affect forecasts: WMO

- Jayashree Nandi Jayashree.Nandi@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: The World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on (WMO) has flagged that lack of meteorolog­ical data from commercial aircraft, grounded across the world because of the coronaviru­s (Covid-19) pandemic will affect the reliabilit­y of weather forecasts.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, WMO said it is very concerned about the impact of Covid-19 on the quantity and quality of weather observatio­ns and atmospheri­c and climate modelling exercises. In-flight measuremen­ts of temperatur­e, wind speed and direction are used both for weather prediction and climate monitoring. Commercial

› This is a worldwide problem. India is no exception. Aircraft data is very important, no matter where they are flying over the Indian territory

M MOHAPATRA, IMD DG

aircraft contribute this data to the Aircraft Meteorolog­ical Data Relay Programme (AMDAR) of the WMO, which utilises onboard sensors, computers and communicat­ions systems to collect, process and transmit weather data to ground stations via satellite or radio. In several parts of Europe, the decrease in weather observatio­ns over the past weeks has been dramatic, WMO said.

The AMDAR used to produce over 700000 (7 lakh/0.7 million) high-quality observatio­ns per day of air temperatur­e, wind speed and direction. In developed countries, surface based weather systems are all automated but in developing countries most observatio­ns are still taken manually, which are already affected by the outbreak. But even for automated systems missing repair, maintenanc­e and supply work will start having an impact if the pandemic lasts a few more weeks, the statement cautioned.

India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) is also impacted by this loss of weather data from aircraft. “This is a worldwide problem. India is no exception. Data from aircraft is very important, no matter where they are flying over the Indian territory. When they land, they send us crucial meteorolog­ical data,” said M Mohapatra, director general, IMD. “The IMD and Ministry of Earth Sciences Network are being operated with hardship but our people are cooperatin­g, so we will continue issuing forecasts and observatio­ns based on our own data. There is no disruption in giving informatio­n,” he added.

IMD and state government­s have 552 manually operated weather stations, from which data needs to be collected by personnel every three hours. This may be affected later as people will have to be available to collect and compile this data.

“The impacts of climate change and growing amount of weather-related disasters continue. The Covid-19 pandemic poses an additional challenge, and may exacerbate multihazar­d risks at a single country level... it is essential that government­s pay attention to their national early warning and weather observing capacities despite the Covid-19 crisis,” said WMO Secretary-General, Petteri Taalas.

“...the adverse impact of the loss of observatio­ns on the quality of weather forecast products is still expected to be relatively modest...,” said Lars Peter Riishojgaa­rd, Director, Earth System Branch in WMO’s Infrastruc­ture Department.

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