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 weather forecast




The promising potential of vision language models for the generation of textual weather forecasts

Steele, Edward C. C., Mane, Dinesh, Monti, Emilio, Orus, Luis, Chantrill-Cheyette, Rebecca, Couch, Matthew, Dale, Kirstine I., Eaton, Simon, Rangarajan, Govindarajan, Majlesi, Amir, Ramsdale, Steven, Sharpe, Michael, Smith, Craig, Smith, Jonathan, Yates, Rebecca, Ellis, Holly, Ewen, Charles

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Despite the promising capability of multimodal foundation models, their application to the generation of meteorological products and services remains nascent. To accelerate aspiration and adoption, we explore the novel use of a vision language model for writing the iconic Shipping Forecast text directly from video-encoded gridded weather data. These early results demonstrate promising scalable technological opportunities for enhancing production efficiency and service innovation within the weather enterprise and beyond.


What does 'chance of precipitation' really mean? A meteorologist explains.

Popular Science

What does'chance of precipitation' really mean? Here's how to figure out if you can leave the umbrella at home. It's not always "when it rains, it pours." Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. Understanding the weather forecast can sometimes feel like reading tea leaves.


Achieving Skilled and Reliable Daily Probabilistic Forecasts of Wind Power at Subseasonal-to-Seasonal Timescales over France

Lindas, Eloi, Goude, Yannig, Ciais, Philippe

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Accurate and reliable wind power forecasts are crucial for grid stability, balancing supply and demand, and market risk management. Even though short-term weather forecasts have been thoroughly used to provide short-term renewable power predictions, forecasts involving longer prediction horizons still need investigations. Despite the recent progress in subseasonal-to-seasonal weather probabilistic forecasting, their use for wind power prediction usually involves both temporal and spatial aggregation achieve reasonable skill. In this study, we present a forecasting pipeline enabling to transform ECMWF subseasonal-to-seasonal weather forecasts into wind power forecasts for lead times ranging from 1 day to 46 days at daily resolution. This framework also include post-processing of the resulting power ensembles to account for the biases and lack of dispersion of the weather forecasts. We show that our method is able to outperform a climatological baseline by 50 % in terms of both Continuous Ranked Probability Skill Score and Ensemble Mean Squared Error while also providing near perfect calibration of the forecasts for lead times ranging from 15 to 46 days.


The 'Farmer's Almanac' says goodbye after 208 years

Popular Science

Environment Agriculture The'Farmer's Almanac' says goodbye after 208 years The 2026 edition will be its last. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. After more than 200 years of weather wisdom, folklore, and time-tested advice, editors announced that the 2026 will be the last edition. The website will remain operational through the end of December 2025. "Many of you grew up hearing your parents or grandparents quote from the, always having a copy nearby. Maybe you have planted by our Moon phases, consulted the for the'Best Days' to potty train, wean, or go fishing," Editor Sandi Duncan and Editor Emeritus Peter Geiger wrote in the announcement.


NaviAgent: Bilevel Planning on Tool Navigation Graph for Large-Scale Orchestration

Jiang, Yan, Zhou, Hao, GU, LiZhong, Han, Ai, Li, TianLong

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Large language models (LLMs) have recently demonstrated the ability to act as function call agents by invoking external tools, enabling them to solve tasks beyond their static knowledge. However, existing agents typically call tools step by step at a time without a global view of task structure. As tools depend on each other, this leads to error accumulation and limited scalability, particularly when scaling to thousands of tools. To address these limitations, we propose NaviAgent, a novel bilevel architecture that decouples task planning from tool execution through graph-based modeling of the tool ecosystem. At the task-planning level, the LLM-based agent decides whether to respond directly, clarify user intent, invoke a toolchain, or execute tool outputs, ensuring broad coverage of interaction scenarios independent of inter-tool complexity. At the execution level, a continuously evolving Tool World Navigation Model (TWNM) encodes structural and behavioral relations among tools, guiding the agent to generate scalable and robust invocation sequences. By incorporating feedback from real tool interactions, NaviAgent supports closed-loop optimization of planning and execution, moving beyond tool calling toward adaptive navigation of large-scale tool ecosystems. Experiments show that NaviAgent achieves the best task success rates across models and tasks, and integrating TWMN further boosts performance by up to 17 points on complex tasks, underscoring its key role in toolchain orchestration.




Storm clouds threaten a promised AI revolution in weather prediction

New Scientist

"People just moan about the weather forecast and how bad it is…" "It's an absolutely unbelievable scientific achievement," says Andrew Charlton-Perez, talking to me by video from his office at the University of Reading, UK. His colleague, Simon Driscoll at the University of Cambridge, nods enthusiastically. "There are so many different applications and so many different uses for it." They are talking about weather prediction. "People just moan about the weather forecast and how bad it is," says Charlton-Perez.