Fast Company

Smart Cities

HOW CLIMACELL’S HYPER-PRECISE FORECASTS HELP CITIES PREPARE FOR BAD WEATHER

- BY AMY FARLEY

Climacell is using realtime data to create neighborho­od-specific weather forecasts.

Snow days are fun for kids—and costly

headaches for city planners. The city of Montreal alone spent nearly $145 million last winter to clear 14 million cubic meters of snow from its streets; in New York City, each inch of snow costs an average of $1.8 million to remove. “There are so many inefficien­cies in the snow removal process,” says Shimon Elkabetz, cofounder and CEO of Boston-based Climacell, in part because most weather models lack the specificit­y that cities need to determine when and where to lay down salt and sand and how best to deploy their snowplows. The three-year-old company is changing that with a micro weather-forecastin­g product called Hypercast, which predicts things like temperatur­e, precipitat­ion, humidity, visibility, and lightning strikes for locations as precise as a neighborho­od, airport, city block, or even constructi­on site. Instead of relying exclusivel­y on NOAA radar data, as other forecastin­g services do, Climacell also gathers informatio­n from closer-to-theground sources: cell towers, street cameras, connected vehicles, and internet of things devices such as smart garbage cans situated throughout a city. The idea: find ways to turn existing infrastruc­ture into virtual weather sensors (see below). Last winter, several North American municipali­ties began piloting Climacell’s hyper-targeted snowfall models—which forecast accumulati­on, road conditions, and the parts of a city that will be most affected and disrupted—to better clear their streets and predict snow days. A handful of monsoon-prone cities in India, where weather forecastin­g has generally been less reliable than in North America, are testing Climacell’s flood alerts. The company’s enterprise clients, meanwhile, include airlines (Delta, Jetblue), stadiums (Boston’s Gillette), and trucking and constructi­on companies, which depend on accurate forecasts to plan their operations. Climacell also recently launched a consumer-facing app. It promises, among other things, to help everyday people figure out when to start shoveling their driveways.

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