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Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA says

Last updated: July 2, 2025 10:23 am
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Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA says
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A satellite program that has historically been a key source of weather forecasting data will be discontinued by July 31, as the United States enters peak hurricane season, according to the already resource-strapped National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The federal agency, which includes the National Weather Service, initially said last week that it was going to lose access to the satellite data by June 30. But in an update posted online on Monday, NOAA said the deadline to decommission the satellite system was pushed to July 31, at the request of a top official at NASA.

Operated by the U.S. Department of Defense, the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program has since the 1960s collected environmental information each day from satellites orbiting Earth, in order to provide real-time details about conditions in the atmosphere and oceans to the military. The data was made available to weather scientists for traditional forecasting purposes, after being processed by a branch of the Navy that focuses on meteorology and oceanography.

Starting Aug. 1, that naval branch will no longer process or upload satellite data to the computing interface where meteorologists previously accessed it, according to NOAA.

In an email that the agency reposted online, the deputy director of its Office of Satellite and Product Operations said the Navy decided to implement that change in efforts “to mitigate a significant cybersecurity risk” but would continue to distribute the data through the end of next month. A Navy spokesperson told CBS News in an email that it is “discontinuing contributions” to the satellite program “given the program no longer meets our information technology modernization requirements.”

NOAA spokesperson Kim Doster called it a “routine process of data rotation and replacement” in a statement to CBS News on Monday, adding that remaining data sources remaining “are fully capable of providing a complete suite of cutting-edge data and models that ensure the gold-standard weather forecasting the American people deserve.”

“The DMSP is a single dataset in a robust suite of hurricane forecasting and modeling tools in the NWS portfolio,” said Doster, citing several other satellites that feed into the National Weather Service’s forecasting models, including one launched recently that, according to the U.S. Space Force, “advances weather monitoring.”

The data cutoff from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program comes after NOAA lost a substantial chunk of its staff to layoffs and buyouts earlier this year, stemming from President Trump’s initiative to reduce government spending in part by shrinking the federal workforce.

Former NOAA administrator Rick Spinrad, who served in that role during the Biden administration, told CBS News in an email that “there’s no logical explanation” for the cutoff, “other than some downstream benefit to the private sector” — which would align with goals outlined in Project 2025 to move toward privatizing NOAA and the Weather Service. Losing that data puts the agency’s current capabilities at risk, Spinrad said, especially during hurricane season.

“NWS is working feverishly to start using other data from a satellite DoD launched last year,” he added. “This is ill-timed, poorly planned, and dangerous.”

Hurricane season runs through Nov. 30, and NOAA forecasters said in May that they expected this one to be more active than an average year. The season typically reaches its “peak,” its most active period, around August and September.

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