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The decision by the Department of Defense to stop providing data to NOAA is just the latest challenge for the agency this ...
After flooding caused wreckage across the Texas Hill Country, NASA’s Disaster Program resources were brought in to provide ...
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is about to perform double duty after President Donald Trump named him interim head of ...
Forecasters at Colorado State University – the pioneers of seasonal hurricane forecasting – issued their July outlook for the ...
The loss of satellite data, along with other cuts to data, funding, and staffing, could ultimately put more lives at risk during hurricane season.
Yet critical data about this freakish weather hitting America and the rest of the world is about to go offline, at the moment in history that we need it the most. Don’t let the government withhold ...
About 600 miles off the west coast of Africa, large clusters of thunderstorms begin organizing into tropical storms every ...
About 600 miles off the west coast of Africa, large clusters of thunderstorms begin organizing into tropical storms every ...
The Department of Defense announced that it will end the sharing of some satellite data that helps in hurricane forecast.
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.
Hurricane forecasters are at risk of losing a crucial tool because of military concerns surrounding the cybersecurity of a ...