Discarded weather balloons from Tasmania found on Warrnambool beach
Pete Furphy never expected to be collecting high-tech scientific equipment when he took his kids to clean a remote beach on Victoria's south-west coast.
The Furphys were scouring a 3.5-kilometre stretch of Warrnambool beach, three hours' drive west of Melbourne, when his 12-year-old daughter spotted a piece of plastic foam with an antenna and a deflated piece of latex attached.
A bit of research revealed it was not ordinary marine debris — they had found the remains of a weather balloon that had floated across Bass Strait from Tasmania.
It was launched as part of a US-led project studying climate and atmospheric conditions.
The packs, called radiosondes, record information about clouds and precipitation.
(
Supplied: Warrnambool Beach Patrol
)
About 1,300 weather balloons are launched globally every day, according to the World Meteorological Organisation.
How many of those, like the Furphy's find, end up on a beach far from home is not clear.
"It's like state-sanctioned littering,"
Mr Furphy said.
"To be on that beach when we're so far away from other urban centres, it's a shock to see the plastic."
Keeping the coast clear
Colleen Hughson leads the team of environmental warriors cleaning beaches across the south-west.
She was not as surprised by the find.
"She said we've been getting heaps of them this summer, they're putting up two of them every day," Mr Furphy said.
"
But that day we went out we found two of these meteorological measuring devices, which is quite extraordinary.
"
Volunteers have found six discarded weather balloons on south-west Victoria shores in recent months.
(
Supplied: Warrnambool Beach Patrol
)
The balloons are launched from the Kennaook/Cape Grim Baseline Air Pollution Station on Tasmania's north-west tip — one of just three sites globally selected for their pristine air quality.
Each package carries a radiosonde — a styrofoam box with sensors, GPS, and batteries — to measure temperatures, relative humidity, pressure, wind speed, wind direction.
Warrnambool's Beach Patrol crew have found five other similar balloons washed up on south-west Victorian shores this summer.
The CAPE-k project
The cleanest air in the world is collected from an air-monitoring station at Kennaook/Cape Grim.
(
ABC News: Jordan Young
)
The weather balloons found in Warrnambool were from the CAPE-k research project hosted by the CSIRO, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, and the US Department of Energy.
Photo shows
Aerial Kennaook_Cape Grim baseline air monitoring station in Tasmania
When the wind blows in from the Southern Ocean, the north-western tip of Tasmania receives the purest air on the planet. For scientists, it's the perfect place to resolve a puzzle that's messing with climate models.
The project's operations manager, Heath Powers, said taking samples in such a pristine environment allowed researchers to gather data about how clouds formed without influence from emissions.
Every day, up to four weather balloons are launched from the station and rise 25 kilometres into the atmosphere.
"They start off as pretty decent-sized party balloons … and as they go up the atmospheric pressure drops and they get bigger and bigger and bigger until at the top of their flight they're about the size of a school bus," Mr Powers said.
"
That's when they finally burst and fall back to Earth.
"
Eco-friendly options
Mr Powers said the balloons, which were made out of a natural latex rubber, and the attached packages were ultimately incorporated into the environment because there was no practical way to retrieve them.
He said testing of more eco-friendly packages was underway.
The new radiosonde packages are made out of a wax-covered cardboard wrapping.
Mr Powers said the research was important enough to justify the environmental impact.
"Clouds have a huge impact on warming and cooling of the Earth's surface, which impacts everything from long-term climate to short-term weather,"
Mr Powers said.
Researchers are testing radiosondes made out of more biodegradable materials.
(
Supplied: Vaisala
)
He said launching weather balloons was "absolutely vital" to scientific research and operational science, such as forecasting and understanding how weather impacted people.
"I want to acknowledge that these certainly have an environmental impact and we're working to try and improve and minimise the impact," he said.
"
The trade-off is that the measurements and the impact on people's quality of life and people's safety by knowing what the weather is, are absolutely important and that's part of the trade-off equation.
"
Hashtags

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

The Age
2 days ago
- The Age
Mass car rescue on Mount Hotham as farmers welcome the rain
Elsewhere, two hikers who became stuck on the remote Wonnangatta walking track, also in the state's High Country, were found safe and well on Monday evening. 'They're just in an area where they're, due to the snowfall, unable to progress further on the track,' Johnston earlier told ABC radio. Specialised alpine search and rescue units used sleds to rescue trapped people, as emergency vehicles struggled to access those stranded because of snow-covered roads. By Monday evening, Mount Hotham had recorded 62 centimetres of snow since the start of the long weekend, while Falls Creek had recorded 60 centimetres. Loading Cross Country Skiing Association Victoria treasurer James Louw said the state's alpine environments could become hostile quickly, especially for people who ventured in poorly prepared. 'The weather report doesn't tell you how terrible you might feel when you're out there,' he said. 'It's a really short timeframe from being OK to being hypothermic and unable to care for yourself.' Louw said he often saw visitors heading to alpine resorts who had not brought the equipment necessary to stay safe, such as tyre chains. Victorian farmers have welcomed the rain that has soaked the state across the long weekend, breaking records in the south-west, but they're still hoping for more. Mount Sabine, in the Otways between Lorne and Apollo Bay, had 137 millimetres fall since Friday, while the towns of Mortlake and Penshurst received their highest three-day June rainfall totals on record. Warrnambool broke its highest single-day June total record after 39 millimetres of rain fell between 9am on Saturday and Sunday. Simon Severin works as an agronomist, a type of scientist specialising in crop production, in Horsham. He said farmers would be hoping for more rain in about a fortnight. 'We've had to sow nearly all the crop dry and wait for rain to bring the crop up, so the crops will emerge on this rain,' he said. 'I think everyone's had more than 15 millimetres, up to 25-30 in places [in the Wimmera]. This will get the crops and the feed growing, but follow-up rain will be crucial. The soil will be very dry and this rain will be gone very soon.' Meteorologist Daniel Sherwin-Simpson said more prolonged rain was expected in western Victoria next Monday. The cold and wet conditions follow a warm and dry autumn that parched large parts of the state. Rainfall had been at the lowest on record for the past 16 months on Victoria's south-west coast. Victorian Farmers Federation president Brett Hosking said the rain was a welcome relief to farmers across the state, particularly for those in the south-west, where the drought has hit hardest. Loading 'We'll need the rain to keep coming,' he said. 'This didn't fill the dams, it just started that process.' Hosking said the drought had hit the mental health of many farmers and the rain would have relieved some of that stress. 'The rain would certainly have boosted the wellbeing of farmers across Victoria,' he said.

Sydney Morning Herald
2 days ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Farmers welcome the rain at last, but at least six people remain trapped at Mount Hotham
Victorian farmers have welcomed the rain that has soaked the state across the long weekend, breaking records in the southwest, but they're still hoping for more. Mount Sabine, in the Otways between Lorne and Apollo Bay, saw 137 millimetres fall since Friday, while the towns of Mortlake and Penshurst got their highest three-day June rainfall totals on record. Warrnambool broke its highest single-day June total record after 39 millimetres fell between 9am Saturday and Sunday. Simon Severin works as an agronomist, a type of scientist specialising in crop production, in Horsham. Loading He said farmers would be hoping for another rain event in about a fortnight. 'We've had to sow nearly all the crop dry and wait for rain to bring the crop up, so the crops will emerge on this rain' he said. 'I think everyone's had more than 15 millimetres, up to 25-30 in places (in the Wimmera). This will get the crops and the feed growing, but follow-up rain will be crucial. The soil will be very dry and this rain will be gone very soon.'

The Age
2 days ago
- The Age
Farmers welcome the rain at last, but at least six people remain trapped at Mount Hotham
Victorian farmers have welcomed the rain that has soaked the state across the long weekend, breaking records in the southwest, but they're still hoping for more. Mount Sabine, in the Otways between Lorne and Apollo Bay, saw 137 millimetres fall since Friday, while the towns of Mortlake and Penshurst got their highest three-day June rainfall totals on record. Warrnambool broke its highest single-day June total record after 39 millimetres fell between 9am Saturday and Sunday. Simon Severin works as an agronomist, a type of scientist specialising in crop production, in Horsham. Loading He said farmers would be hoping for another rain event in about a fortnight. 'We've had to sow nearly all the crop dry and wait for rain to bring the crop up, so the crops will emerge on this rain' he said. 'I think everyone's had more than 15 millimetres, up to 25-30 in places (in the Wimmera). This will get the crops and the feed growing, but follow-up rain will be crucial. The soil will be very dry and this rain will be gone very soon.'