IBM hopes to change weather forecasting around the globe using big data and a new supercomputer

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In this NOAA satellite handout image, shows Hurricane Florence it just makes landfall off the coast of the U.S. in the Atlantic Ocean on September 13, 2018. Coastal cities in North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia are under evacuation orders as the Category 2 hurricane approaches the United States. 

NOAA

In a potentially historic marriage of supercomputing and big data, IBM goes live today with a global weather model that it says can provide far more accurate forecasts for the entire world.

Called GRAF — Global High-Resolution Atmospheric Forecasting — the new model offers high resolution weather forecasts globally with a detail for areas as small as 2 miles wide, compared to 6 to 9 miles for weather models covering parts of the world outside of the advanced countries such as Europe, the US and Japan.

IBM says its new supercomputer, DYEUS, built just to run the model, will issue 12 trillion pieces of weather data every day and process forecasts every hour, while many global weather models update only every 6 to 12 hours.

“We’re actually getting down to the cellular level of the thunderstorms now, where we weren’t able to do that before. And with that information, we can provide better support to critical decision makers,” said Kevin Petty, head of science and forecasting at The Weather Company, bought by IBM three and a half years ago.

IBM became a leading player in meteorology in 2015 when it purchased the Weather Company, retaining the data gathering and forecasting units while splitting off the Weather Channel.

Tons of applications

While Americans are accustomed to turning to their phones for storm warnings and accurate, hourly forecasts, billions of people around the globe lack even basic weather forecasts, making the world a much more chaotic and dangerous place. For companies like American Airlines, better international weather forecasts can mean more comfortable flights for passengers who can be routed around turbulence. If dispatchers have more confidence in storm locations and strengths, they can even shorten flights, flying closer to weather disturbances.

“If we can get a better accurate resolution, a better picture of that weather event, we are able to much more confidently operate the flight as planned,” said Steve Abelman, manager of weather technology for American Airlines. which is currently a client of IBM’s weather services. “If we can do a more fuel efficient flight, we can certainly save money on fuel.”

A woman walks in floodwaters as she holds a sac following heavy monsoon rains at a flood affected area of Gaibandha District, in Northern Bangladesh, on July 19, 2019. – Floods continue to worsen in Bangladesh as the water level in the Brahmaputra crossed a 40-year record, inundating vast areas.

REHMAN ASAD | AFP | Getty Images

But Abelman said the model still has to prove itself and American will wait as much as several months before relying on the data. And even then it will use the data together with other sources. Any weather model, no matter how advanced the underlying technology, can only prove its accuracy over time. But IBM sees a huge need in the market for its new product.

“Any business that doesn’t have a weather strategy is missing out on returns,” said Cameron Clayton, general manager of Watson Media, Weather and special Red Hat project at IBM. Weather “impacts everything. It impacts supply chains, the kind of purchasing decisions we make, when you get up in the morning, how you’re going to dress, what you’re going to eat. And being able to predict that in advance for retailers, energy companies, travel and transportation businesses is all we do.”

Named after ancient god

Individuals can access the data thru the Weather app on smart phones and in other weather sources that use IBM data. IBM says the key to the model is in the supercomputer DYEUS, named for an ancient god that ruled the daytime sky.

DYEUS uses IBM’s Power 9 processing chips, which are also used in Summit, the world’s fastest supercomputer. In addition, DYEUS employs graphics processing units, which are used in video gaming, enabling much faster processing of visual output. GRAF will provide forecasts of up to 15 hours for 26 million locations around the world.

One of the limitations of global weather forecasts is a lack of data, but IBM says GRAF has the ability to pull in data from airplane sensors and even from smartphones, which can provide temperature and pressure data. IBM declined to give revenue projections for the GRAF project or disclose its costs. The model was developed in a public-private partnership with the National Center for Atmospheric Research.

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