WMO Chief: Beyond Just Weather Forecasting

World Meteorological Day on 23 March highlights the progress - and gaps - in life-saving forecasts and early warnings, which are vital for global economic and social well-being in an era of rapid change.

This year marks the 75th birthday of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) as a United Nations specialized agency, which has overseen the free and unrestricted exchange of data, products, and services underpinning decisions ranging from daily leisure activities to seasonal crop planting to multi-billion dollar infrastructure investments.

"We are more than just weather forecasters," said Celeste Saulo . "WMO makes the world safer, more secure, and prosperous."

WMO's transformation of science into action for the global good is more necessary than at any time in its history.

WMO recently confirmed that 2024 was the hottest year on record . Ocean warming and sea level rise is accelerating. Glacier retreat and melting ice threaten long-term changes. This is accompanied by more extreme weather events such as rapidly intensifying tropical cyclones, devastating rainfall, storm surges, flooding, deadly droughts, and wildfires.

" The theme of this year's World Meteorological Day - Closing the Early Warning Gap Together - reminds us that, in this new climate reality, early warning systems are not luxuries. They are necessities and sound investments - providing an almost ten-fold return," said UN Secretary-General António Guterres in a message .

"Yet, almost half the world's countries still lack access to these life-saving systems. It is disgraceful that, in a digital age, lives and livelihoods are being lost because people have no access to effective early warning systems," he said.

World Meteorological Day is observed on 23 March each year. It showcases the essential contribution of National Meteorological and Hydrological Services to society and to building a safer, more resilient world.

"The staff of National Meteorological and Hydrological Services are like doctors and nurses - working 24/7 to safeguard and promote public well-being," said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo.

"During the past 75 years, we have brought billions of dollars in added value to the global economy. We have saved billions more in averted economic losses from weather, climate and water-related hazards. And we have saved hundreds of thousands of lives," she said.

World Meteorological Organization poster:
75th birthday of the World Meteorological Organization

Advances and Gaps

Every minute of every day, data flows from monitoring stations across the world to weather prediction centers. Millions of individual measurements - from satellites, from stations on the ground, from weather balloons, from ocean buoys and ships, from satellites, from aircraft - and more.

Without WMO coordination and its unified network, each country would face the impossible task of collecting global data on its own.

While forecasting capabilities have advanced significantly, gaps remain in observation networks, forecasting accuracy, and access to high-quality climate and hydrological data.

Strengthening National Meteorological and Hydrological Services (NMHSs) in developing nations is not only vital for climate adaptation - it is essential for global resilience, security, and economic stability.

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