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UK weather forecasters are top of accuracy league

Paul Peachey
Monday 22 July 2002 19:00 EDT
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The days of derision for the British weather forecaster may finally be at an end. As it published its latest annual report yesterday, the Meteorological Office claimed to be at the top of the world league when it came to next-day predictions.

Every week, forecasters get it right on six of the seven days, better than at any time in its 148-year history. It comes after a remarkable improvement in techniques in the past decade.

The Met Office's claim to pre-eminence comes only 15 years after its reputation suffered as bad a mauling as large areas of southern England when Michael Fish dismissed suggestions of an impending hurricane on the BBC. The winds that swept in ripped up 15 million trees, killed 20 people and caused millions of pounds of damage.

Figures released yesterday suggested that forecast accuracy had improved by 7 per cent during the past couple of years. The Met Office achieved six out of seven main targets and earned a reputation for international excellence. Peter Ewins, the chief executive, said the improvements meant the Met Office was "firmly establishing" iyself "as the best in the world".

A spokesman for the organisation said that longer-range weather forecasts for three days' time were now as accurate as next-day forecasts were 15 years ago.

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