More Than Just a Weather Service: Japan’s Multifunctional Meteorological Agency

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The Japan Meteorological Agency is playing an increasingly prominent role as extreme weather events continue to strike the Japanese archipelago. More than just a weather service, JMA also monitors volcanic and seismic activity on land and waves and currents at sea, and it helps protect lives by issuing various types of warnings.

Room for Both Supercomputers and Humans

A grid covering the entire globe for use in numerical weather prediction. (JMA)

From the start of Japan’s weather service in the nineteenth century through the mid-1970s, weather predictions were based on the subjective judgment of meteorologists looking at weather maps. But advances in meteorological science and observational technologies and, above all, the development of supercomputers capable of quickly performing huge numbers of calculations made it possible to create numerical weather prediction models based on physical principles.

Numerical weather prediction starts with the input of day-to-day observation data for each of the cells in a grid covering the globe, as shown in the chart below. It takes a supercomputer about an hour to calculate the information on expected temperature, pressure, wind, and precipitation that serves as the basis for weather forecasts. Thanks to the use of this simulation technology, weather forecasting has changed from a subjective undertaking to an objective mathematical process. All of JMA’s meteorological predictions, including short-term forecasts and expected paths of typhoons, are now based on this technology.

Computers cannot do it all, though. One major change relating to JMA was the introduction of the system of certified weather forecasters in 1993. These forecasters are now working at about 60 private-sector weather companies. National examinations are held twice a year for candidates, and the cumulative total number of examinees topped 170,000 as of the forty-fourth examination this summer. About 6% pass on average, and the total number who have won this qualification is slightly less than 10,000.

But job openings are scarce, and the number who are actually working as forecasters is probably far short of 1,000.  There is a need for additional employment opportunities to allow these people to put their knowledge to work, such as by supporting disaster-prevention activities at the local government level.

Protecting Lives and Contributing Internationally

In August 2013, JMA introduced a new system of “emergency warnings.” The agency has long issued warnings and advisories concerning heavy rain and other abnormal natural phenomena. The new designation was adopted with the aim of strengthening this warning system in the face of global warming and the increasing frequency of torrential rains and other types of extreme weather. Issued by local meteorological offices to municipal governments, emergency warnings indicate a level of danger far exceeding the normal warning criteria. The system is designed for these special warnings to be issued in the case of phenomena like heavy rainfall with a level of intensity observed only once every few decades. As part of JMA’s increased emphasis on disaster countermeasures, local meteorological offices are also strengthening their support for municipal authorities through the provision of direct advice to the responsible employees on the issuance of evacuation advisories and evacuation orders by municipal government heads.

In closing, I would like to touch on JMA’s international cooperation. In addition to operating its Himawari meteorological satellites as part of a global information-sharing system, the agency hosts a number of regional support centers, including a regional typhoon center and volcanic ash advisory center, and it dispatches employees to work at the World Meteorological Organization headquarters in Geneva. Japan provides around 10% of the WMO’s annual funding, a share second only to that of the United States. JMA also participates in the drafting of the reports of the International Panel on Climate Change concerning global warming. International cooperation is essential to the practice of meteorology.

(Originally published in Japanese on November 12, 2015. Title photo: JMA Volcanology Division Director Kitagawa Sadayuki holds a press conference in Tokyo following the eruption of Mount Aso on September 14.  © Jiji.)

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earthquake tsunami global warming Evacuation weather typhoon volcano Mount Ontake Japan Meteorological Agency forecast WMO

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