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While Defense Meteorological Satellite Program data will no longer be provided to NOAA, the agency has not lost all access to ...
A satellite program that has historically been a key source of weather forecasting data will be discontinued by July 31, as ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday it is delaying by one month the planned cutoff of satellite ...
The U.S. is in the middle of hurricane season, but key data used to track the intensity of these storms may soon go offline.
Hurricane experts have already raised alarms about the effect the Trump administration's slashing of science budgets could ...
Earlier this month, the Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said it would discontinue the “ingest, processing and ...
Hurricane forecasters and scientists rely on weather data collected and processed by Department of Defense satellites. The Navy has decided to stop sharing the data.
This is a big deal," meteorologist Michael Lowry said. "For hurricane forecasting, this is the biggest hit that I've seen to ...
This latest blow to federal forecasting abilities is sparking outrage from meteorologists and public officials.
Scientists were initially given less than a week to prepare for the loss of microwave observations that are key in detecting ...
The program was initially supposed to be cut off June 30 to "mitigate a significant cybersecurity risk," NOAA said in an ...
The data was initially planned to be cut off on June 30 "to mitigate a significant cybersecurity risk," NOAA's announcement said. The agency now says it's postponing that until July 31.