Recently, Philip Jones of CRU (Climatic Research Unit) claimed to have entered into a variety of confidentiality agreements
with national meteorological services that prevent him from publicly archiving the land temperature data relied upon by IPCC.
Why don't you access the «raw data» (good luck
with the national meteorological services!)
One hypothesis — maybe Jones» work up to the mid-1990s was nothing more than collating data from prior World Weather Records publications i.e. he never had ANY correspondence
with national meteorological services prior to the mid 1990s at the earliest.
Luther said the WMO is trying to work
with national meteorological services around the world to create «seamless» climate and weather forecasts.
Not exact matches
In a forthcoming article in the Bulletin of the American
Meteorological Society (BAMS), authors Dr. Richard Anthes, President Emeritus at University Corporation of Atmospheric Sciences (UCAR) and Dr. Alan Robock, Professor at Rutgers University's School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, describe the two - decade - long process to form an active
meteorological partnership
with the
Meteorological Institute of Cuba (their
National Weather
Service).
AN automated system for gathering
meteorological data for the US
National Weather
Service, which is intended to replace hundreds of human observers, can not cope
with the wrong kind of weather.
Michael Glantz, the social scientist whose program was recently cut by the
National Center for Atmospheric Research, is in Libya at the moment working
with the
meteorological service there on education programs for North Africa.
Input data for the analysis, collected by many
national meteorological services around the world, is the unadjusted data of the Global Historical Climatology Network (Peterson and Vose, 1997 and 1998) except that the USHCN station records up to 1999 were replaced by a version of USHCN data
with further corrections after an adjustment computed by comparing the common 1990 - 1999 period of the two data sets.
The long - term capacity development aims of the project will involve working
with national meteorological and hydrological
services (NMHSs), universities and training centres in the region to strengthen training resources and the capacity for climate
service development.
This task has become easier over the last decade
with the development of advanced methods of Data Assimilation commonly used in atmospheric sciences to optimally combine a short forecast
with the latest
meteorological observations in order to create accurate initial conditions for weather forecasts generated several times a day by the
National Weather
Services (e.g., [194,195,196,197,198]-RRB-.
GFDRR's Hydromet team and the World Bank have partnered
with leading
national meteorological services across the globe — including agencies from Austria, China, Finland, Japan, Switzerland, Sweden, United Kingdom, and United States — and work closely
with the World
Meteorological Organization (WMO).