News

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will no longer track the cost of extreme weather disasters. The federal ...
NOAA's Gulfstream 4 jet collects data to improve hurricane forecasts with advanced tools like GPS dropsondes and Tail Doppler ...
NOAA ends its climate disaster tracking database amid Trump-era cuts, limiting public access to vital data on billion-dollar ...
The insurance industry used the public database to estimate future costs, while local governments turned to it for lessons on ...
The move is also yet another of President Donald Trump’s efforts to remove references to climate change and the impact of ...
In 2011, the Cincinnati region recorded 13.52 inches of rain. The wettest since then was April 2014, which saw 6.66 inches of ...
NOAA announced that it is decommissioning several databases, including its widely reported annual compilation of ...
NOAA will stop tracking economic impacts of climate disasters by 2024, raising concerns for transparency and preparedness ...
According to an internal memo sent by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) security office on Monday, ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) will no longer update its widely cited list of weather and climate disasters that cause billions of dollars in damage, in yet another ...
NOAA has not yet announced a replacement for the database, but officials say they remain committed to providing reliable data ...