BAMOS Vol 31 Special Issue October 2018 Bulletin Vol 31 Special Issue 01 2018 | Page 15

Presentation summaries and abstracts BAMOS Special Issue New research for new services Toward value-added weather and environmental predictions Beth Ebert Bureau of Meteorology Weather agencies such as the Australian Bureau of Meteorology are branching out with new services designed to provide energy, health, emergency services, and other sectors with tailored information to assist them with their weather-related decision making. Many of these new services are being built in close partnership with the user community, combining environmental information and the supercomputing capability of the national weather service with information supplied by the users. Current examples of where this is occurring here in Australia include ensemble prediction of tropical cyclone winds and waves for the offshore oil and gas industry, and development of a new thunderstorm asthma forecasting system to help health departments alert people with asthma and hay fever to take protective action. The cross-disciplinary research and information exchange required for these projects to succeed is leading to improved understanding of how weather information can be combined with other information to support decisions which minimise damage to infrastructure, improve public health outcomes, etc. Advances in communication technology are enabling sharing of diverse data across sectors and provision of forecasts through more interactive and user- friendly applications. 15