
NOAA delays the cutoff of key satellite data for hurricane forecasting
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday it is delaying by one month the planned cutoff of satellite data that helps forecasters track hurricanes.
Meteorologists and scientists warned of severe consequences last week when NOAA said, in the midst of this year's hurricane season, that it would almost immediately discontinue key data collected by three weather satellites that the agency jointly runs with the Defense Department.
The Defense Meteorological Satellite Program's microwave data gives key information that can't be gleaned from conventional satellites. That includes three-dimensional details of a storm, what's going on inside of it and what it is doing in the overnight hours, experts say.
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. Peak hurricane season is usually from mid-August to mid-October.
Spokespeople from NOAA and the Navy did not immediately respond to a request for more details about the update.
NOAA — which has been the subject of hefty Department of Government Efficiency cuts this year — said Friday the satellite program accounts for a 'single dataset in a robust suite of hurricane forecasting and modeling tools' in the National Weather Service 's portfolio.
The agency's 'data sources are fully capable of providing a complete suite of cutting-edge data and models that ensure the gold-standard weather forecasting the American people deserve,' a spokesperson said.
But Union of Concerned Scientists science fellow Marc Alessi told The Associated Press on Friday that detecting the rapid intensification, and more accurately predicting the likely path, of storms is critical as climate change worsens the extreme weather experienced across the globe.
'Not only are we losing the ability to make better intensification forecasts, we are also losing the ability to predict accurately where a tropical cyclone could be going, if it's in its development stages,' Alessi said. "This data is essential.
'On the seasonal forecasting front, we would see the effects," he added, "but also on the long-term climate change front, we now are losing an essential piece to monitoring global warming.'
___
Alexa St. John is an Associated Press climate reporter. Follow her on X: @alexa_stjohn. Reach her at ast.john@ap.org.
___
___
The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Netflix wants to stream rocket launches now
Netflix and NASA have announced a partnership to livestream NASA+ programming on the streaming platform, beginning this summer. The collaboration will feature content such as rocket launches, astronaut spacewalks, mission coverage, and live views of Earth from the International Space Station. NASA aims to leverage Netflix's global audience of over 700 million to share its space exploration story with a broader public. The NASA+ streams will not be exclusive to Netflix and will continue to be available for free on the NASA app and This venture marks Netflix's continued expansion into live event coverage, following previous experiences with a boxing match and NFL games, and reported interest in Formula 1 broadcast rights.


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Jurassic World Rebirth is a silly, cheesy epic but it might have rebooted a once brilliant franchise facing extinction
JURASSIC WORLD REBIRTH (12A) 134mins ★★★★☆ MOST people think that the dinosaurs became extinct around 66million years ago. But for me, the big bang happened in June 2022, when Jurassic World Dominion was released. 5 5 The sixth instalment of my most beloved franchise was, quite frankly, an insult to all the giant reptiles who once ruled the Earth. That lumbering and lazy sequel was all out of adrenaline, and it felt like the once-brilliant brand, which first burst on to the cinema screens in 1993 with Steven Spielberg 's breathtaking Jurassic Park, should now be fossilised for ever. So taking a seat to watch this, the seventh in the movie series, I felt more trepidation than a palaeontologist being helicoptered into a new dinosaur park. But, sometimes, film finds a way. And I am delighted to report that Rebirth, which is out on Wednesday, has had a few shocks from the dino-fibrillator to get the heart of the original movies beating again. It has a shiny new cast, including Oscar-nominated Scarlett Johansson, plenty of made-by-mad-scientists monsters and, notably, a script from David Koepp, who wrote the screenplay for Spielberg's Jurassic Park and 1997's The Lost World: Jurassic Park. The first scene is a classic — that split-second of human error meaning those wily dinosaurs can take back control. In this particular scenario, it is a scientist whose greedy desire for a Snickers bar while on the job means that a very deadly dino can escape. And eat a lot of people en route. Greed is a consistent theme, as we soon meet covert operative Zora Bennett (Johannson), who along with palaeontologist Dr Henry Loomis (Jonathan Bailey), has been employed to go on a secret mission by Martin Krebs (Rupert Friend), the boss of a pharmaceutical company. Jurassic World Dominion trailer It has been five years since the events of Dominion (whatever they were) and Earth has become an inhospitable place for dinosaurs. They roam around cities without so much as a double take from humans — and are generally eye-rolled and loathed. But out on a remote, forbidden island in the Atlantic Ocean — once used as a research facility — they are flourishing. The trio, plus leader Duncan Kincaid (Mahershala Ali) take to the seas with the promise of earning big money if they can get blood samples from three specific breeds of dinosaurs. Their DNA holds the key to saving countless human lives — and making the pharmaceutical company countless millions. And, as you might have guessed, they have to get pretty close to the megamonsters to get the sample. Oh, and it is also stipulated that they have to be alive and well when it is taken. Hurrah. It is all is nicely set up for an action-packed battle of man versus dino food. 5 5 British director Gareth Edwards brings a breath of fresh air to the stale brand, and has embraced more CGI than ever before, making it more of a monster movie than a dinosaur one. Especially when we are introduced to Distortus rex, a mutant with six limbs due to the scientific experiments on the mammals over the decades. Some of the action out at sea feels new to the series and the performances by Johannson and our two Brits-doing-American-accents, Bailey and Friend, are very watchable indeed. Yes, it's silly, sometimes cheesy, and you know who will live and die quicker than watching a re-run of Midsomer Murders. But Jurassic World Rebirth is a rip-roaring, entertaining stomp back to the heart of the franchise. It will, once again, have several generations jumping out of their cinema seats. 5 Dino facts There are roughly 700 known species of extinct dinosaurs. The reptiles had lived on Earth for about 245million years. English naturalist Sir Richard Owen coined the term Dinosauria, derived from the Greek deinos, meaning 'fearfully great', and sauros, meaning 'lizard'. Dinosaur fossils have been found on all seven continents. All non-avian dinosaurs became extinct about 66million years ago. Modern birds and dinosaurs share a common ancestor.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
A-List Hollywood heartthrob is unrecognizable in long beard and wig in Project Hail Mary trailer
The trailer for Amazon MGM's Project Hail Mary has dropped and its A-List star looks unrecognizable. Ryan Gosling plays bookish school-teacher turned astronaut Ryland Grace in forthcoming science fiction film adapted from author Andy Weir's 2021 novel of the same name. He looks completely different in a long haired wig and long, scruffy beard. Fans of this actor may be able to suss out his identity through his soulful blue eyes that give away his true identity, no matter how different he looks from his everyday style. In the trailer, Ryan wakes up in this disheveled state, confused and wondering where he is. He has no memory of his past or how he ended up on the spaceship. His character states that he just woke up from a coma in outer space and is 'several light-years' away from his apartment. 'I'm not an astronaut,' he declares multiple times, as the trailer reveals the event leading up to him going to space. Ryland is a middle school teacher with a PhD in molecular biology and is recruited by a space force to figure out why the stars, including the sun, are dying out. As the trailer goes on it is revealed the stars were infected with something deadly and it is Ryland's job to find out why. Ryland's mission to space is a 'Hail Mary,' last ditch effort to stop the stars from dying and save all life forms. He expresses hesitancy at being tasked to save all life, saying, 'I understand the stakes, I do. But my place is in the classroom.' He did not want to go to space but when he was told he'd die along with everyone else, he changed his mind. As the trailer goes on, we see Ryland shave his tangled beard off and break down in tears at the enormity of the mission he's been tasked with. At the end of the trailer, Ryland declares that he's met an alien and he tries to teach it Hacky Sack and how to do a thumbs-up. It is revealed that the alien has been tasked with the same job as Ryland. He needs to figure out how to save his species. The trailer features Harry Styles' Sign of the Times as it follows Ryland's attempts to save, essentially, the universe. The film is directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and hits theaters on March 20, 2026. The first footage of the film debuted at CinemaCon in Las Vegas. Sandra Hüller's character ominously says, 'The sun is not the only star dying. If we do nothing, everything on this planet will go extinct.' At CinemaCon, Gosling took a playful swipe at his directors, saying of Lord and Miller, 'They are only happy if they make you do the very rare and coveted laugh-cry.' 'It's an insanely ambitious story that's massive in scope, and it seemed really hard to make, and that's kind of our bag,' Gosling said about the film at CinemaCon, per Variety. He continued: 'This is why we go to the movies. And I'm not just saying it because I'm in it. I'm also saying it because I'm a producer on the film.' Project Hail Mary also features Sandra Hüller, known for 2023's The Zone of Interest" and Anatomy of a Fall. The screenplay was written by Drew Goddard.