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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced that it will discontinue an essential weather data program used ...
Hurricane experts have already raised alarms about the effect the Trump administration's slashing of science budgets could ...
With the peak hurricane season looming, forecasters will be without key information starting Monday because the Defense ...
As peak hurricane season nears, the Pentagon is, not so quietly, preparing to pull the plug on a crucial stream of satellite ...
Meteorologists are losing a sophisticated tool that has proved invaluable when monitoring and forecasting hurricanes.
Scientists were initially given less than a week to prepare for the loss of microwave observations that are key in detecting ...
John Cangialosi, senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center, inspects a satellite image of Hurricane Beryl, ...
The Department of Defense announced that it will end the sharing of some satellite data that helps in hurricane forecast. Here's why ...
A shared satellite system is at risk for closure due to military cybersecurity concerns, which would delay hurricane ...
A NOAA spokesperson clarified that a microwave instrument on another satellite will still provide crucial readings.
The Defense Department will still maintain the Defense Meteorological Satellite program, but announced last week it would cease sharing the imagery with NOAA and NASA. The decision, which was ...
Meteorologists warned of severe consequences when NOAA announced they would immediately discontinue the key data source ...