China Daily (Hong Kong)

Fengyun 3E satellite to improve morning weather forecasts

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

People will have access to more accurate weather forecasts each morning thanks to a Chinese meteorolog­ical satellite that was launched on Monday, a top meteorolog­ist said.

Zhang Xingying, a senior researcher at the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion’s National Satellite Meteorolog­ical Center, said the Fengyun 3E satellite will provide data and images obtained early each morning to meteorolog­ists to enable them to produce forecast products that will be more accurate and reliable.

“Meteorolog­ical authoritie­s around the country hold a teleconfer­ence around 8 am each day to analyze weather conditions and discuss forecast products, but the data and images available to them are insufficie­nt to make accurate forecasts because most of them are generated by Chinese and foreign satellites operating in a geosynchro­nous orbit,” he said.

He explained that satellites in geosynchro­nous orbit are about 36,000 kilometers from Earth, and so can only obtain a small proportion of the informatio­n needed to produce daily forecasts.

Meanwhile, forecaster­s also receive data and images from polarorbit satellites that are closer to Earth, but that informatio­n is usually obtained at 10 am and 2 pm, which means meteorolog­ists have to make morning forecasts based on old data, Zhang said.

“Therefore we are now very much dependent on data gathered through the ground-based observatio­n network, which also have many restrictio­ns,” he said.

Fengyun 3E, lifted into orbit by a Long March 4C carrier rocket launched from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northweste­rn China on Monday morning, is tasked with obtaining data and images at 5:30 am and 5:30 pm.

It will provide more recent informatio­n to forecaster­s to help them improve their morning forecasts, Zhang said.

Developed by the Shanghai Academy of Spacefligh­t Technology, the satellite weighs nearly 2.7 metric tons and is expected to work for at least eight years.

Petteri Taalas, secretary-general of the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, was quoted in a statement issued by the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion as saying that the new satellite “will fill a critical gap in the spacebased observing system”.

With its assistance, the Chinese meteorolog­ical agency will become the third pillar in the global meteorolog­ical polar-orbiting system, he said.

Philip Evans, director-general of the European Organizati­on for the Exploitati­on of Meteorolog­ical Satellites, told the Chinese administra­tion that Fengyun 3E will help the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on achieve its goals of building an integrated global observing system by 2040.

China launched its first weather satellite, Fengyun 1A, in 1988. Since then, it has put 19 Fengyun meteorolog­ical satellites into space. The country now operates nine weather satellites — two of the Fengyun 4 series, three of the Fengyun 2 series and four of the Fengyun 3 series.

 ?? WANG JIANGBO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Fengyun 3E is lifted into orbit by a Long March 4C carrier rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on Monday.
WANG JIANGBO / FOR CHINA DAILY Fengyun 3E is lifted into orbit by a Long March 4C carrier rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on Monday.

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