logo
How AI Can Improve Storm Forecasting as Hurricane Season Arrives

How AI Can Improve Storm Forecasting as Hurricane Season Arrives

Newsweek30-05-2025

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Weather models based on artificial intelligence (AI) are better than traditional forecasts at tracking tropical storms, new research has found, part of a wave of AI breakthroughs that could improve warnings for extreme weather such as hurricanes.
"To our surprise, we saw that for the first time an AI system could outperform all existing operational forecasts for all those hurricane events," Paris Perdikaris, an associate professor in the School of Engineering and Applied Science at the University of Pennsylvania, told Newsweek.
Perdikaris spent a year with Microsoft Research working on a large-scale AI model called Aurora that was trained on more than one million hours of data from various Earth systems. On May 21, Perdikaris and collaborators at Microsoft Research published results in the journal Nature. Aurora did better than traditional forecasts in a range of predictions, including a 20 to 25 percent improvement in tracking tropical storms over two to five days.
"We see a uniform improvement across the board in terms of the accuracy," Perdikaris said.
Weather forecasting systems using AI can now perform better than traditional forecasts when tracking the path of tropical storms. But researchers warn that AI cannot replace the need for physics-based systems and good data collection.
Weather forecasting systems using AI can now perform better than traditional forecasts when tracking the path of tropical storms. But researchers warn that AI cannot replace the need for physics-based systems and good data collection.
Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty
It's the latest in a string of promising reports on AI forecasting for extreme weather.
In December, researchers at the AI lab Google DeepMind also published in Nature results from its machine learning forecast system, called GenCast. The researchers wrote that GenCast "better predicts extreme weather, tropical cyclone tracks and wind power production."
In February, the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) put its AI Forecasting System (AIFS) into operation and reported that it outperforms state-of-the-art physics-based models for many measures, including tropical cyclone tracks.
"The AIFS typically does a more accurate job of moving large-scale weather systems around the globe," Matthew Chantry, strategic lead for machine learning at ECMWF, told Newsweek via email. "Storms, are typically more accurately positioned."
AI is not a panacea for tropical storm forecasting, scientists said, and recent research has exposed some weaknesses in AI forecasting. One study found that while AI systems do well at tracking a hurricane's path, they tend to underestimate wind speed and storm strength.
But with climate change supercharging storms, AI promises to be a valuable addition to our warning system, potentially helping to save lives and prevent property damage.
Cheaper, Faster Weather Modeling
The Weather Company, producers of The Weather Channel, Weather Underground and Storm Radar, have been developing AI and machine learning for forecasting tools for years, according to Peter Neilley, senior vice president of weather forecasting services and operations.
"It's just gotten more sophisticated and that enabled us to create these data-driven models," Neilley told Newsweek. "So that's all culminated in this sort of revolution for weather."
Neilley explained that, unlike traditional weather models in which supercomputers work through complicated physics formulas, AI systems operate by learning from patterns from historical weather data.
Building the AI model takes a lot of work and computing power, he said, but "they're very cheap to run once you've built the model."
That, Neilley said, is AI's main benefit. Where traditional physics-based models can take hours, an AI model could take less than a minute.
"What that enables you to do is actually run them many, many times and each time, you're running a slightly different model," he said. "With that much better prediction of how it may play out, I can use that to help people and businesses make better decisions."
Brad Reinhart, senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center, works on tracking Hurricane Beryl, the first hurricane of the 2024 season, at the National Hurricane Center on July 01, 2024 in Miami, Florida.
Brad Reinhart, senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center, works on tracking Hurricane Beryl, the first hurricane of the 2024 season, at the National Hurricane Center on July 01, 2024 in Miami, Florida.The Weather Company President Sheri Bachstein will be among the speakers at Newsweek's AI Impact Summit June 23 to 25 in Sonoma, California, to talk about how the company is investing in AI.
In the past year, The Weather Company has partnered with NVIDIA to produce more granular forecasts using AI and to improve weather simulations. Another collaboration with government scientists aims for better integration of vast weather data to get a clear snapshot of the state of the atmosphere, the critical starting point for forecasting.
AI Cannot Replace Need for Basic Data
Neilley said the AI approach can also yield a different type of forecast, one with a probabilistic range of outcomes to consider. While that rich outlook offers many benefits in some extreme weather conditions, such as an approaching hurricane, it could lead to information overload.
"Just giving decision makers more complicated information is probably making their job harder," he said. "What is needed is an AI-based decision modeling system on top of the weather model."
The AI company Urbint aims to provide that sort of informed weather preparation for electric utility companies. In April, Urbint acquired StormImpact, an AI company that predicts the risk of storms, wildfires and floods for utility infrastructure.
"They don't just need to know that a storm is coming—they need to know which circuits will go down, how many customers will be impacted, and what resources they'll need on the ground to restore power quickly and safely," Urbint CEO Corey Capasso told Newsweek via email. The system predicts what transformers, substations and overhead lines are most vulnerable.
"That means utilities can anticipate not just if, but where and how the grid will be impacted, and start planning for the exact number and type of crews needed," he said.
StormImpact's technology is already being used by major utility companies, including Southern Company, American Electric Power and FirstEnergy.
Weather-related disruptions cost utility companies an average of $70 billion annually, Urbint said. A report released earlier this month by the Electric Power Research Institute shows extreme weather events causing at least $1 billion in damage are becoming more frequent. From 2019 to 2023, billion-dollar disasters happened about 20 times a year.
Climate scientists warn that our warmer atmosphere is contributing to many extreme weather events. Warmer air holds more moisture leading to more intense rainfall and flooding, and higher sea surface temperatures fuel tropical storms.
As we head into this Atlantic hurricane season on the heels of the two hottest years on record, several forecasts predict a busier than average season. Several veteran storm forecasters have voiced concerns about the Trump administration's deep cuts to the National Weather Service and its parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), warning that some key weather bureaus are understaffed and basic data gathering has been compromised.
It may be tempting to look to the advances in AI to fill gaps left by those cutbacks. But for all the potential benefits AI holds for weather forecasting, researchers caution that it is not a replacement for existing systems of gathering and analyzing weather data.
"We still need the raw data," the University of Pennsylvania's Paris Perdikaris said.
"We still need high quality data coming from physics-based simulation models that have been in place all these years."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meet the tiny Australian Moth that travels 1,000 km and navigates using the stars
Meet the tiny Australian Moth that travels 1,000 km and navigates using the stars

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Meet the tiny Australian Moth that travels 1,000 km and navigates using the stars

An Australian moth follows the stars during its yearly migration, using the night sky as a guiding compass, according to a new study. When temperatures heat up, nocturnal Bogong moths fly about 1,000 kilometres to cool down in caves by the Australian Alps. They later return home to breed and die. Birds routinely navigate by starlight, but the moths are the first known invertebrates, or creatures without a backbone, to find their way across such long distances using the stars. Scientists have long wondered how the moths travel to a place they've never been. A previous study hinted that Earth's magnetic field might help steer them in the right direction, along with some kind of visual landmark as a guide. Related Does cutting off rhinos' horns protect them from poachers? New study supports controversial approach Since stars appear in predictable patterns each night, scientists suspected they might help lead the way. They placed moths in a flight simulator that mimicked the night sky above them and blocked out the Earth's magnetic field, noting where they flew. Then they scrambled the stars and saw how the moths reacted. When the stars were as they should be, the moths flapped in the right direction. But when the stars were in random places, the moths were disoriented. Their brain cells also got excited in response to specific orientations of the night sky. The findings were published Wednesday in the journal Nature. It 'was a very clean, impressive demonstration that the moths really are using a view of the night sky to guide their movements,' said Kenneth Lohmann, who studies animal navigation at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and was not involved with the new research. Researchers don't know what features of the night sky the moths use to find their way. It could be a stripe of light from the Milky Way, a colourful nebula or something else entirely. Whatever it is, the insects seem to rely on that, along with Earth's magnetic field, to make their journey. Related Rare snail that can 'slurp up earthworms like noodles' caught on camera laying an egg from its neck Scientists use special 'squeezing' and electrical probes to collect sperm from endangered kākāpō Other animals harness the stars as a guide. Birds take celestial cues as they soar through the skies, and dung beetles roll their remains short distances while using the Milky Way to stay on course. It's an impressive feat for Bogong moths, whose brains are smaller than a grain of rice, to rely on the night sky for their odyssey, said study author David Dreyer with Lund University in Sweden. 'It's remarkable that an animal with such a tiny brain can actually do this,' Dreyer said.

Wild Things: Birds enjoy an insect boom
Wild Things: Birds enjoy an insect boom

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Wild Things: Birds enjoy an insect boom

Wild Things columnist Eric Brown is buzzing with enthusiasm about the varied insects to be found during a record sunny spring and the benefits to birds relying on them for food. While it awaits a verdict on its future, Crossness Nature Reserve has come alive with a little sunshine particularly encouraging insects out into the open. Lesser emperor dragonflies are being regularly reported by observers at the Belvedere-based reserve under threat from industrial development. Wild Things: Good news for puffins Plenty of common butterflies like holly blue are around, too, plus three marbled whites seen in the Sea Wall Field area. The beautiful ruby-tailed wasp also seen on the reserve is a solitary cuckoo wasp with a dubious habitat of laying its eggs in the nests of other solitary wasp and bee species, particularly mason bees. When the eggs hatch the larvae eat the larvae of the host species in order to develop. Bird interest includes sedge warblers making use of the plentiful reeds with one observed feeding a fledgling. A slow worm was also discovered as Bexley Borough's top reserve maintains its reputation for biodiversity. Insects are busy at Chislehurst Common, too. A gaudy hoverfly known as xanthgogramma pedissequum showed up . It has no official common English name, but it is easy to see from the picture why it is known as 'superb dayglower' across Europe. Also around are speckled wood butterflies and orange-tailed mining bees, andrena haemorrhoa, with their brilliant orange thoraxes. Wild Things: Searching for butterfly royalty Mining bees are solitary bees. They do not form colonies, but live independently, tunnelling into the ground where they make a nest. The glade at the common, with areas of bare earth, is an ideal site. They collect pollen for young to feed on, and are important pollinators. Broad-bodied chaser dragonflies and hairy shieldbugs are among many other insect species to be found on Chislehurst Common. If you are nearby, why not make time for a walk around to see how many insect and bird species you can find ? From my house I have seen many large flying insects. This is good news for the local swifts I first spotted returning from Africa on May 1, six days earlier than my first "house" sighting of 2024. I've even seen one catching an insect and passing it to another swift on the wing. My largest swift count so far at one time has been five and I was delighted to also spot a group of five house martins in the same airspace. Previously I've been lucky to see just a couple of house martins all summer. On one memorable day I saw swifts, house martins and a swallow all pass my window. Maybe an increase in insects has been responsible for luring these birds in the sunniest spring on record. Certainly I expect to hear soon of an increase in butterfly numbers after last year's dismally wet spring hit their numbers.

Alligator on Florida golf course takes victory lap with stolen club
Alligator on Florida golf course takes victory lap with stolen club

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Alligator on Florida golf course takes victory lap with stolen club

Footage has surfaced showing an alligator traversing a Florida pond while displaying a golf club like a trophy. Presumably, the golfer is OK. The footage, shared by WINK News meteorologist Matt Devitt, was captured at an Orlando golf course recently by a WINK viewer named Doug. 'Only in Florida,' Devitt joked via Instagram. 'I'd let him play through.' It's unclear if the alligator stole the club from a bag, if the club had been left near the pond, or if the golfer had tossed the club into the water during a tantrum. It's also unclear if the voice in the audio belongs to the golfer who lost the club. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Matt Devitt (@mattdevittweather) While alligator sightings on Florida golf courses are fairly routine, this was extraordinary. It looks as though the gator is using the club as a snorkel or, as one follower remarked, a periscope. The top Instagram comment, predictably, reads: 'What happened to the golfer?' This article originally appeared on For The Win: Alligator on Florida golf course takes victory lap with stolen club

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store