Close Menu
Meteorological Technology International
  • News
    • A-E
      • Agriculture
      • Automated Weather Stations
      • Aviation
      • Climate Measurement
      • Data
      • Developing Countries
      • Digital Applications
      • Early Warning Systems
      • Extreme Weather
    • G-P
      • Hydrology
      • Lidar
      • Lightning Detection
      • New Appointments
      • Nowcasting
      • Numerical Weather Prediction
      • Polar Weather
    • R-S
      • Radar
      • Rainfall
      • Remote Sensing
      • Renewable Energy
      • Satellites
      • Solar
      • Space Weather
      • Supercomputers
    • T-Z
      • Training
      • Transport
      • Weather Instruments
      • Wind
      • World Meteorological Organization
      • Meteorological Technology World Expo
  • Features
  • Online Magazines
    • January 2026
    • April 2025
    • January 2025
    • September 2024
    • April 2024
    • Archive Issues
    • Subscribe Free!
  • Opinion
  • Videos
  • Supplier Spotlight
  • Expo
LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook
  • Sign-up for Free Weekly E-Newsletter
  • Meet the Editors
  • Contact Us
  • Media Pack
LinkedIn Facebook
Subscribe
Meteorological Technology International
  • News
      • Agriculture
      • Automated Weather Stations
      • Aviation
      • Climate Measurement
      • Data
      • Developing Countries
      • Digital Applications
      • Early Warning Systems
      • Extreme Weather
      • Hydrology
      • Lidar
      • Lightning Detection
      • New Appointments
      • Nowcasting
      • Numerical Weather Prediction
      • Polar Weather
      • Radar
      • Rainfall
      • Remote Sensing
      • Renewable Energy
      • Satellites
      • Solar
      • Space Weather
      • Supercomputers
      • Training
      • Transport
      • Weather Instruments
      • Wind
      • World Meteorological Organization
      • Meteorological Technology World Expo
  • Features
  • Online Magazines
    1. April 2026
    2. January 2026
    3. September 2025
    4. April 2025
    5. January 2025
    6. September 2024
    7. April 2024
    8. January 2024
    9. Archive Issues
    10. Subscribe Free!
    Featured
    May 5, 2026

    In this Issue – April 2026

    By Web TeamMay 5, 2026
    Recent

    In this Issue – April 2026

    May 5, 2026

    In this Issue – January 2026

    November 27, 2025

    In this Issue – September 2025

    August 11, 2025
  • Opinion
  • Videos
  • Supplier Spotlight
  • Expo
Facebook LinkedIn
Subscribe
Meteorological Technology International
Data

Spire Global to develop an AI-powered model for long-range forecasting

Elizabeth BakerBy Elizabeth BakerMay 13, 20242 Mins Read
Share LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Email
Spire Global to develop an AI-powered model for long-range forecasting
Share
LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Email

As part of a multi-million-dollar deal, Spire Global is to provide a financial firm with its High-Resolution Weather Forecast model, which offers a six-day outlook powered by proprietary data collected from space, and develop an AI-powered model for long-range forecasting.

Training AI weather models

Spire will build on its recent collaboration with Nvidia to leverage Earth-2, Nvidia’s platform for weather and climate change modeling, to train and run AI weather models. These models are projected to increase the accuracy of weather forecasts and produce long-range probabilistic forecasts at unprecedented speeds.

Spire’s multipurpose constellation of satellites, using radio occultation technology, captures precise vertical profiles of temperature, pressure and humidity across the globe, including under-observed areas and remote regions. By using these proprietary data sets to initialize an AI forecasting model, the company aims to usher in a new era of accuracy, speed and reliability in weather forecasting.

Weather insights

“Having spent my career in the field of weather, I’m amazed at the rapid pace at which we’re seeing AI transform weather forecasting, especially when paired with proprietary data that can only be collected from space,” said Michael Eilts, general manager of weather and climate at Spire. “As climate change causes more volatile and extreme weather patterns, our models are equipping financial firms with the crucial insights needed to anticipate weather’s influence on price dynamics and market trends.”

In related news, the World Economic Forum recently released a report that reveals that Earth observation (EO) data has the potential to drive over US$3tn in cumulative economic benefits globally by 2030 while advancing a wide range of climate and nature solutions. Click here to read the full story.

Previous ArticleTajikistan advances Early Warnings for All initiative through local-level workshops
Next Article £5.7m investment will triple computing capacity for atmospheric data analysis

Read Similar Stories

Automated Weather Stations

UNESCO hands over nine automated weather stations to the Ghana Meteorological Agency

May 12, 20262 Mins Read
Data

Copernicus launches Weather Replay app to explore historical weather data

May 11, 20262 Mins Read
Automated Weather Stations

University of Vermont launches first station in statewide weather monitoring network

May 8, 20262 Mins Read
Latest News

UNESCO hands over nine automated weather stations to the Ghana Meteorological Agency

May 12, 2026

Copernicus launches Weather Replay app to explore historical weather data

May 11, 2026

University of Vermont launches first station in statewide weather monitoring network

May 8, 2026

Receive breaking stories and features in your inbox each week, for free


Enter your email address:


Supplier Spotlights
  • Synoptic Data PBC
Getting in Touch
  • Contact Us / Advertise
  • Meet the Editors
  • Media Pack
  • Free Weekly E-Newsletter
Our Social Channels
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
© 2026 UKi Media & Events a division of UKIP Media & Events Ltd
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Notice and Takedown Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.