Come on Bob, the resources are there for sure. The BoM uses pretty much the same technologies as the MetService from what I gather.There's a claim the MetService is getting the weather forecast wrong half the time and now a man who keeps a close eye on the weather watchers is calling for an independent inquiry.
According to a study by a pilot of 40 years and an education in meteorology, MetService gets it's forecast wrong 50% of the time.
Whenever the forecast is wrong it is frustrating in the least, but potentially disastrous if your livelihood depends upon the accuracy of the weather.
"We can get caught with a gale force wind which will blow the heads of this crop on to the ground, so it's very important that we have an accurate forecast," says farmer Andrew Gallanders.
The MetService forecast is a topic of fascination for Auckland helicopter instructor John Clements.
He's done his own survey, comparing weather predictions for Auckland with what actually happened and found the forecast and reality are worlds apart.
"On 50% of occasions the forecast were as if they were for a different planet...50% were not right.," Clements says.
A state owned enterprise, the MetService rates itself much higher at more than 90% accurate.
Forecaster Bob McDavitt says that's good going for an island country with wild geography, making it difficult to predict how a weather pattern will behave.
"Our job is to capture the pattern and evolve it in to the future with the computers, which we do quite nicely but chaos keeps changing things, so weather forecasters are never going to be 100% right," McDavitt says.
Clements says while the Metservice may consider it a success if they forecast showers and there is a shower in the Auckland area, he says he would count that as a failure
In Britain and Japan, which are geographically similar to New Zealand, forecasts are more detailed. Here the Metservice concentrates on an area of 60 nautical miles and is yet to get bigger better computer power.
"We're getting better but resources are always a drag point for meteorology," McDavitt says.
But is that good enough for the thousands of people that rely on the weather for their living? From builders to boaties, farmers and contractors, is it good enough when considering the financial cost to the country in lost earnings?
-One News
Video link: http://www.tvnz.co.nz/view/video_popup_ ... width=128k
Maybe the champs model needs a review?- Seen far too many occasions when the Global models beats the Champs/MM5 model in localised heavy rain/thunderstorm events and Tmax's during summer.
As for '90% accuracy' where do they get this info from - METAR observers?!

I could see that as a reality for Wellington.. not up here.
It would be good if some MetService employees post here on this matter...? (Bob?)
