The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration created the National Centers for
Environmental Prediction (NCEP) to take advantage of improving
technology and better serve the public and modernized National Weather
Service. The NCEP’s goal is to protect life and property, as
well as mitigate economic loss, by providing accurate forecasts and
forecast guidance products to weather service field offices.
The NCEP prepares and makes available national forecasts and
outlooks of weather and climate. Meteorologists currently generate
weather forecasts for three to five days, soon to extend to seven
days. Climate predictions are made for two weeks out to a year.
Nine national centers comprise the NCEP: (click here
for links)
- Aviation Weather Center
- Climate Prediction Center
- Environmental Modeling Center
- Hydrometeorological Prediction Center
- Marine Prediction Center
- NCEP Central Operations
- Space Environmental Center
- Storm Prediction Center
- Tropical Prediction Center
The NCEP was established in 1958 as the National Meteorological
Center. Since the center’s beginning, operational weather
forecasting has transformed from an infant discipline into a mature
science.
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