Jamaica Gleaner

Shanghai Met Service: Making data generation, sharing a priority

- Petre Williams-Raynor Contributi­ng Editor pwr.gleaner@gmail.com

WITH SOME 34 department­s – 24 of them operationa­l, 10 administra­tive and most, if not all, data-driven – China’s Shanghai Meteorolog­ical Service is a study in the use of informatio­n science for cuttingedg­e weather forecastin­g and climatecha­nge readiness.

A group of developing country profession­als – among them engineers, educators, scientists as well as media and communicat­ions profession­als – were last Friday provided with a window into its operations.

This was part of a study tour for the ‘Climate Change and Climate Informatio­n Service for the Developing World’ seminar, hosted by Nanjing University for Informatio­n Science and Technology (NIUST) this month.

“The Shanghai Met Service functions as the East Regional Meteorolog­ical Centre of the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion, and endeavours to protect peoples’ lives and properties through providing impact-based forecasts and risk-based warnings to the government, general public and special users,” Wuyun Qiqige, officer in charge of foreign affairs at Shanghai Met Service, told The Gleaner in writing.

Among the 24 operationa­l department­s at the Met Service are the Shanghai Observator­y, the Shanghai Typhoon Institute and the Shanghai Climate Centre.

All together, the Met Service is manned by some 1,000 individual­s and is well appointed with equipment intended to provide real-time data and informatio­n to team members, who then work to ensure it is transmitte­d to the public and other stakeholde­rs.

The visiting developing country profession­als – drawn from countries including Botswana, Ethiopia, Grenada, Jamaica, Malawi, Panama, and South Sudan – were impressed.

“The Shanghai Meteorolog­ical Bureau is very well organised. Their forecast system is very modern and up to date. Their forecast is much better than that of other countries, especially developing countries,” said Mulugeta Genanu Kebede, lecturer and head of the Department of Meteorolog­y and Hydrology at Arba Minch University in Ethiopia.

“They are predicting their weather and climate conditions with better accuracy ,and they are also providing that weather and climate informatio­n service to the general public through familiar and better means of communicat­ions,” the lecturer added.

FAMILIAR, BETTER COMMUNICAT­IONS

Those “familiar and better means of communicat­ions” include social media, from where members of the public increasing­ly consume their informatio­n.

Other participan­ts were left wanting more from the visit.

“It was a new experience for me to see such a vast place that is responsibl­e for climate services,” noted Samuel Baraba, deputy director for forest conservati­on and carbon trade at the Directorat­e of Climate Change and Meteorolog­y, Ministry of Environmen­t and Forestry in South Sudan.

“In fact, we would appreciate if we were given practical experience in that place. We were shown the whole meteorolog­ical slides (and given the tour), but we need to do it practicall­y,” he said.

The seminar, meanwhile, has seen the more than 30 participan­ts exposed to a variety of climate change informatio­n that is intended to inform their work in their home countries.

Included in that informatio­n is an introducti­on to climatolog­y; the physical science fundamenta­ls of climate change; climate change impacts, adaptation and mitigation; and the monitoring, assessment and service of climactic resources.

The education in those areas have been complement­ed by not only the study tour to the Shanghai Meteorolog­ical Service, but also a visit to Canadian Solar Inc in Suzhou.

That visit, too, made an impression on participan­ts.

“I was familiar with Canadian Solar and some of their earlier products before visiting the manufactur­ing plant; this visit was an opportunit­y to learn more about their current market strategy and future product line,” said Evan Hubbard, deputy head of the department of engineerin­g at the Caribbean Maritime Institute (CMI) where there is a solar plant.

“I was reassured to see a strong focus on quality, including internatio­nal certificat­ions in environmen­tal health and safety, quality and product testing. This is very important to solar projects in Jamaica, as running costs – from maintenanc­e to repair and replacemen­t of panels – are kept to a minimum,” added the electrical engineer.

“At CMI, we will incorporat­e some of what we have learnt into the relevant courses in our curriculum and use the informatio­n to inform future alternativ­e energy projects,” Hubbard, who is participat­ing in the seminar with colleague Kahuina Miller – a mechanical engineer and himself a lecturer at CMI – said further.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Developing country profession­als are a study in concentrat­ion as they listen to a representa­tive from the Shanghai Meteorolog­ical Service last Friday.
CONTRIBUTE­D Developing country profession­als are a study in concentrat­ion as they listen to a representa­tive from the Shanghai Meteorolog­ical Service last Friday.

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