News

The loss of weather data will threaten lives and livelihoods, and accelerate the nation’s growing home-insurance crisis, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Mark Gongloff writes.
We still don't know why tornados happen, but we're getting closer to finding answers — just as the Trump administration threatens to cut $1 billion in funding ...
Satellite data allows meteorologists to keep track of the location, structure and intensity of severe weather, helping to keep people safe. Now they're losing access to these satellites.
Researchers are looking at how sharks can help gather ocean data for improved hurricane predictions by using sharks as freely moving monitors.
While the reasoning behind the move is not clear, the two officials affected led the investigation into whether NOAA’s ...
The federal government in April announced $325 million in cuts to a program that would help protect vulnerable communities ...
Weather satellites operated by the U.S. Department of Defense will stop delivering data to NOAA on July 31. Here’s why and ...
Lawmakers from both parties have so far rejected steep cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) ...
This administration is placing vulnerable communities at greater risk when severe weather strikes, says Sara Gonzalez-Rothi, ...