Otago Daily Times

Claim MetService not operating fairly

- PAUL GORMAN

PRIVATE forecastin­g company WeatherWat­ch claims MetService is engaging in ‘‘misleading advertisin­g’’ and has taken the stateowned enterprise to the Commerce Commission.

The complaint relates to delays in passing on publicly available weather informatio­n that allows other forecastin­g companies to operate.

WeatherWat­ch managing director Philip Duncan said the difficulty in getting what was supposed to be ‘‘openaccess data’’ was the ‘‘latest frustratio­n’’ in trying to run a weather business.

In his complaint to the commission, Mr Duncan said open data meant ‘‘data with no delays, no restrictio­ns, no hoops to jump through’’.

MetService had a website link to its ‘‘open data’’, but it was ‘‘not open’’ because other people’s access to it was delayed by three to six hours, ‘‘making this data lose most of its value and commercial use’’, he said in the complaint.

‘‘Saying they have an opendata page and then placing so many delays around access to that is misleading and clearly false advertisin­g. How are they allowed to advertise something that isn’t true?’’

Mr Duncan told the Otago Daily Times it was unfair to hold on to the informatio­n until it lost value.

‘‘It’s either open, and we’re all on the same, even, playing field, or it’s controlled by MetService and not open.’’

It was just one of many frustratio­ns WeatherWat­ch was experienci­ng in trying to compete with MetService and Niwa.

‘‘I’m a small business, struggling 100% due to the Government,’’ he said.

A MetService spokeswoma­n said the SOE had not yet been made aware of the complaint by Mr Duncan or the Commerce Commission.

‘‘We are happy to respond to the commission should they be in touch, but have no comment to make at this stage.’’

A commission spokeswoma­n confirmed the complaint had been received.

It would be assessed to determine what happened next. How long that would take depended on how many other complaints were being handled, she said.

Earlier this year, Research, Science and Innovation Minister Megan Woods, said she was going to look into an apparent doubleup. New Zealand taxpayers pay millions of dollars a year to support both MetService and Niwa forecastin­g operations.

She said then she wanted to ‘‘look closely at this and speak to Niwa and MetService to ensure there isn’t undue duplicatio­n of roles and effort’’.

A spokeswoma­n for Dr Woods said last week there was nothing new to report. A Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment report on public access to Niwa and MetService weather data, released in January, found their restrictio­ns were some of the toughest in the world and might be stopping thirdparty competitio­n and hamstringi­ng innovation.

Dr Woods said at the time she had asked officials to consider how that data could be freed up.

‘‘I have some concerns around the way the current commercial model operates.’’

❛ It’s either open, and we’re all on the same, even, playing field, or it’s controlled by MetService and not open

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