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. January 2026
    2. September 2025
    3. April 2025
    4. January 2025
    5. September 2024
    6. April 2024
    7. January 2024
    8. September 2023
    9. April 2023
    10. Archive Issues
    11. Subscribe Free!
    Featured
    November 27, 2025

    In this Issue – January 2026

    By Hazel KingNovember 27, 2025
    Recent

    In this Issue – January 2026

    November 27, 2025

    In this Issue – September 2025

    August 11, 2025

    In this Issue – April 2025

    April 15, 2025
  • Opinion
  • Videos
  • Supplier Spotlight
  • Expo
Facebook LinkedIn
Subscribe
Meteorological Technology International
Satellites

China’s FY-3D weather satellite deployed successfully

Helen NormanBy Helen NormanNovember 23, 20172 Mins Read
Share LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Email
Share
LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Email

The China Meteorological Administration (CMA) has successfully launched its new polar-orbiting meteorological satellite, Fengyun-3D (FY-3D), which will provide early weather warnings to help reduce the impact of natural disasters. The satellite took off on November 15 from the Taiyuan Launch Center onboard a Long-March-4C carrier rocket and will replace CMA’s eight-year-old weather satellite – FY-3B. FY-3D has been fitted with five completely new remote sensing instruments including the Hyperspectral Infrared Atmospheric Sounder (HIRAS); the Greenhouse Gases Absorption Spectrometer (GAS); the Wide-angle Aurora Imager (WAI); and the Ionospheric PhotoMeter (IPM). The function of the satellite’s core instrument MERSI (Medium Resolution Spectral Imager) has also been upgraded. The satellite has been fitted with 10 remote sensing instruments in total. HIRAS covers 70 times the number of spectral channels compared to its predecessor and is expected to dramatically increase the forecast efficiency for typhoons or other high-impact weather events, with predictions up to five or seven days in advance. MERSI, another core instrument on FY-3D, is comparable to the imager on board America’s JPSS satellite and is capable of precise, quantitative detection for clouds, aerosols and ocean colors, which is useful for disaster monitoring and environmental management. China has successfully launched 16 meteorological satellites to date, seven of which remain in orbit providing large quantities of observational data for meteorology, oceanography, agriculture and aviation services.

Previous ArticleNASA and NOAA launch JPSS-1 weather satellite
Next Article Thales Alenia Space to work with UK Space Agency and CNES on carbon monitoring satellite mission

Read Similar Stories

Early Warning Systems

China expands MAZU early warning system for developing countries

April 30, 20262 Mins Read
Space Weather

Northumbria University secures £4m to study Earth’s radiation belts

April 16, 20262 Mins Read
Extreme Weather

AI model improves real-time prediction of wildfire spread

April 16, 20263 Mins Read
Latest News

Researchers investigate links between air pollution, extreme weather and climate

May 1, 2026

China expands MAZU early warning system for developing countries

April 30, 2026

Météo-France begins construction of France’s tallest weather radar tower in Sembadel

April 29, 2026

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


Enter your email address:


Supplier Spotlights
  • REMTECH
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.