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Weak area of low pressure formed about 100 miles east of Jacksonville, Florida, accompanied by showers, thunderstorms for ...
Hurricane experts have already raised alarms about the effect the Trump administration's slashing of science budgets could ...
About 600 miles off the west coast of Africa, large clusters of thunderstorms begin organizing into tropical storms every ...
A satellite program that has historically been a key source of weather forecasting data will be discontinued no later than ...
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.
A NOAA spokesperson clarified that a microwave instrument on another satellite will still provide crucial readings.
John Cangialosi, senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center, inspects a satellite image of Hurricane Beryl, ...
The Defense Department will still maintain the satellite program will cease sharing the imagery with NOAA and NASA.
While Defense Meteorological Satellite Program data will no longer be provided to NOAA, the agency has not lost all access to ...
The Department of Defense announced that it will end the sharing of some satellite data that helps in hurricane forecast.
The program was initially supposed to be cut off June 30 to "mitigate a significant cybersecurity risk," NOAA said in an ...
Weather experts are warning that hurricane forecasts will be severely hampered by the upcoming cutoff of key data from U.S.
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