NOAA06-R258 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Chris Vaccaro 6/20/06 |
NOAA
News Releases 2006 NOAA Home Page NOAA Public Affairs |
NOAA’s National Weather Service, in partnership with the Environmental Protection Agency, will now provide experimental forecast guidance for ground-level ozone for the western half of the contiguous United States—a total of 17 states from the Plains to the Pacific Coast. This is in addition to the air quality forecast guidance currently available for the eastern half of the U.S. “This new forecast guidance will provide accurate projections of ozone levels near the ground, linked to our weather forecast models,” said Brig. Gen. David L. Johnson, U.S. Air Force (Ret.), director of NOAA’s National Weather Service. “Weather and air quality go hand-in-hand. Daily weather conditions, such as temperature and wind, play an integral role in creating and trapping harmful ozone where we all work, play, and breathe.” Hour-by-hour ozone forecasts, through midnight of the following day, are available online, providing information for the onset, severity, and duration of poor air quality for more than 290 million people from coast to coast. This product also serves as a tool that local and state air quality forecasters can use when creating daily air quality outlooks and issuing poor air alerts. “Air quality forecasts can help Americans reduce their exposure to ozone pollution, which is a special concern for children and people with asthma and other lung diseases,” said Bill Wehrum, acting assistant administrator for EPA’s office of air and radiation. “This expanded tool will help improve forecasts for cities across the country.” Following several months of testing, the forecast guidance for the western United States will be evaluated for addition to the full suite of National Weather Service operational products. “This new experimental guidance expands coverage westward to the Pacific Ocean and will enable additional state and local agencies to issue enhanced and more geographically specific ozone-based air quality warnings to the public,” said Paula Davidson, program manager for air quality forecasting with NOAA’s National Weather Service. States included in this experimental expansion are Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming, and the remaining western portions of Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Texas. The eastern halves of these states were included in last year’s expansion into the central U.S. Air quality forecast guidance was first implemented into operations for the northeast quadrant of the U.S. in 2004. The
air quality forecast capability is being built by a team of NOAA and
EPA scientists that develop, test, and implement improvements in the
science of air quality forecasting for real-time predictions. National
Weather Service forecast models are used to drive simulations of atmospheric
chemical conditions using pollutant emissions and monitoring data provided
by EPA. Twice daily, supercomputers operated by NOAA’s National
Centers for Environmental Prediction produce ground-level ozone forecasts,
which are available on National Weather Service and EPA data servers.
On the Web: NOAA: http://www.noaa.gov NOAA Air Quality Guidance (operational): http://www.weather.gov/aq NOAA Experimental Guidance for western U.S.: http://www.weather.gov/aq-expr NOAA/EPA
Air Quality Awareness: http://www.airquality.noaa.gov |