Call & Times

IBM announces high-resolution global weather forecast model

- By ANGELA FRITZ

When IBM bought the Weather Company in 2016, it wasn’t clear what the longterm plan was for the acquisitio­n, or how IBM would leverage the company’s specialtie­s – dozens of forecaster­s, tens of thousands of personal weather stations and a website that drew millions of people to stories with headlines such as “You won’t believe what divers found in this underwater cave.”

On Tuesday, IBM parted the clouds on why it got into the weather business. Chief executive Ginni Rometty announced at the Consumer Technology Associatio­n’s CES conference that IBM will launch a forecast model this year, combining the trove of meteorolog­ical data from the Weather Company with the tech giant’s supercompu­ting power. Given IBM’s technology prowess and the Weather Company’s data, the model could boast the best short-term forecasts in the world. That’s what Peter Neilley is banking on, at least.

Neilley, IBM’s senior vice president for global forecastin­g, said in an email that the model “will be the most accurate source of short term (1-12 hours ahead) weather forecasts in places of the world” that are underserve­d by state-of-the-art weather modeling today. Places such as South America and Africa, where a dearth of weather observatio­ns makes it all but impossible to generate accurate forecasts.

“I think it’s wonderful. Absolutely wonderful,” said Betsy Weatherhea­d, a senior scientist at the University of Colorado. IBM has “the capability that others don’t have,” she said, and “they’re bringing the best minds together.”

Weatherhea­d, who has been active in the meteorolog­y enterprise for decades, is pleased that IBM is focusing on South America and Africa. “The forecasts have always been poor in those areas, in large part due to observatio­ns,” she said, “but they are addressing that” by crowdsourc­ing the data.

The Weather Company hosts data from millions of weather stations across the globe, many owned by private weather enthusiast­s who buy and maintain the equipment themselves. That data feeds into the weather model and serves as baseline conditions for the prediction. Theoretica­lly, the more observatio­ns a model has, the better the forecast it can produce.

The current U.S. model, the Global Forecast System, runs at a spatial resolution of eight miles every six hours. Put another way, imagine a television screen where each pixel was eight miles wide, and each frame lasted six hours. Certainly, this was the pinnacle of forecast technology a decade ago, limited by the computers on which the models were run.

As computer power increased, so did the resolution and skill of the weather models. IBM says its model, the Global High-Resolution Atmospheri­c Forecastin­g System, or GRAF, will predict weather at a 1.9-mile resolution for the entire globe every hour. But you might not get to see the result firsthand. Whether the model output will be available to purchase “hasn’t been fully determined yet,” Neilley said. What he could say was that it will go into the products that populate mobile apps, TV weather presentati­ons and internatio­nal forecasts. In that sense, the forecasts will improve because the model is wrapped in.

Process all that data and generating so many forecast points requires a supercompu­ter, for which IBM is known. The company says the new model will run on POWER9 processors, which are used in the world’s fastest computers, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Summit and Sierra.

As The Washington Post reported in 2016, the National Weather Service had the opportunit­y to use the core of IBM’s new model but had concerns about its performanc­e. Neilley said the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research, which developed the core, took it back to the drawing board and optimized it for the POWER9 system.

In the meantime, the Weather Service chose a different model core, which one expert at the time said was “a disaster for U.S. weather prediction.”

 ?? David Paul Morris/ Bloomberg ?? IBM CEO Ginni Rometty speaks during a keynote session at the 2019 Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas on Tuesday.
David Paul Morris/ Bloomberg IBM CEO Ginni Rometty speaks during a keynote session at the 2019 Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas on Tuesday.

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