The Coast Guard renewed its agreement with Weatherflow, Inc., to place the company’s weather sensors on some of the service’s beacons.
The 10-year memorandum of agreement allows the installation of sensors on selected Coast Guard Aids to Navigation (ATON).
At no cost to the taxpayers, Weatherflow provides the Coast Guard with the meteorological and oceanographic data it gathers from the sensors to support the service’s safety, security and stewardship missions across U.S. waterways.
There are 141 stations in eight Coast Guard districts. The agreement also grants the Coast Guard access to information from 350 non-Coast Guard-based sensors for official use.
In addition to supporting Coast Guard missions, the sensors also fulfill reporting requirements to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and other government agencies.
According to NOAA’s National Hurricane Center, the meteorological information from Weatherflow sensors on Coast Guard Aids to Navigation is critical for providing accurate forecasts and post-storm analysis for hurricanes and other extreme weather events.
During Hurricane Florence, three of the 10 stations recording the highest winds were from Weatherflow sensors placed on Coast Guard stations.
This blog is not a replacement or substitute for the formal posting of regulations and updates or existing processes for receiving formal feedback of the same. Links provided on this blog will direct the reader to official source documents, such as the Federal Register, Homeport and the Code of Federal Regulations. These documents remain the official source for regulatory information published by the Coast Guard.
Categories: Navigation Systems, Waterways Policy