Monday, 23 March 2026

World Meteorological Day

 

World Meteorological Day, 23rd March 2026

                                        World Meteorological Day

The striking image above greeted me when I logged on this morning. It was taken in the Sonoran Desert which I’m told has two rainy seasons – moderate winter rainfalls and powerful summer monsoons. It is the latter storms that bring lightning storms, sudden drops in temperature and intense deluges.

The following is a message from António Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations.

On this World Meteorological Day, we are reminded that foresight saves lives. 

Climate chaos is rewriting the rules of weather, with record heat, longer droughts, rising seas and ever more frequent and extreme disasters. Accurate, trusted science is our first line of defence.

The World Meteorological Organization and national services help keep us safe by weaving a global web of data, from land, sea, air and space – turning measurements into forecasts, and forecasts into early warnings. Yet the global observing system is under strain, with critical gaps, especially in least developed countries and small island developing States. 

This year’s theme, Observing Today, Protecting Tomorrow, is a call to action.  Governments, development banks and the private sector must scale up support for our global observing backbone, from surface stations to satellites, and ensure data is shared openly and equitably.  And we must accelerate Early Warnings for All so that, by 2027, every person is protected by life-saving alerts.  Investing in observation pays many times over – strengthening peace, security, resilience and sustainable development.   

By observing today, we can protect tomorrow – for people, for planet, for prosperity, and for generations to come.

Will his words resonate with those who have the power to act? 2027 is a breath away. 

3 comments:

  1. I think we have done too little but I also think its never to late, if enough people listen to this call to arms.. will it happen? probably not..

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nope, those in charge seam to think it's a tomorrow problem, the rest of us do what we can.

    ReplyDelete



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