Weatherzone

This article is about the Australian meteorological services provider formerly known as The Weather Company. For the American conglomerate now owned by IBM using the name, see The Weather Company.

Weatherzone, known before 9 August 2010 as The Weather Company, is the main provider of value-added meteorological services in Australia. Their main business lines are services to television stations, major websites and mobile phone companies. They also provide services to energy, insurance and large retail corporations. They specialize in aggregating content from a large range of private and government funded organisations (e.g. Bureau of Meteorology, Environmental Protection Authority, World Meteorological Organisation, Australian Broadcasting Corporation etc.). The Weatherzone is the only second major complementing company to the Bureau of Meteorology that provides weather information in Australia.

History

Weatherzone was founded in 1998 by former Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) meteorologist, Mark Hardy, providing graphics, scripts and weather briefings for television weather presentations.[1] In 2008 in response to an increasing demand from industry for more accurate and more frequently updating weather forecasts, Weatherzone developed the Opticast forecast system. This system takes information from over a dozen computer models including variants of the in-house operated Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. The Opticast algorithms are run every hour ensuring the forecasts are continually staying abreast of rapid and previously unforeseen meteorological changes. The accuracy of Opticast allowed weatherzone to make a successful foray into the lucrative energy and mining weather forecasting markets. Over the subsequent 2 years many of Australia's major electricity companies commenced using weatherzone's Opticast derived forecasting products including AGL, Snowy Hydro, Delta Energy, Energex and Tru Energy.

On 25 June 2008 Fairfax Media acquired a 75% share in Weatherzone (then known as The Weather Company) with 25% still owned by the founder, Mark Hardy who retained the Managing Director role.[1] On 9 August 2010 The organisation changed its name from The Weather Company to Weatherzone. On 6 October 2010, it was announced that James Caust had moved into the Managing Director role.[2]

Weatherzone is now part of Fairfax's Digital Ventures group of companies and in September 2013 Charles Solomon was appointed Managing Director.

In 2015 Weatherzone expanded into Africa with an investment in South Africa based AfricaWeather.[3]

Weatherzone also operates the largest total lightning detection network in Australia.[4]

Services

Weatherzone runs their own WRF computer model which is used to produce content for the subscription product, Weatherzone Pro (formerly Weatherzone Silver), and feeds into their Opticast forecasting model. It employs a team of meteorologists to offer a meteorological alternative to the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM). Weatherzone also provides solutions for displaying weather on websites. Some large sites that use this include Elders, an Australian agricultural site, News Corp Australia (formerly News Limited) and Fairfax Media.[1]

Advanced forecasts and alerting products are also produced for the energy, mining and insurance industries.

Weatherzone publishes its own weather site and smartphone apps which combines their own content with Bureau of Meteorology information and that from several other providers into a more user friendly and customizable interface.

Weatherzone sources surf data from Swellnet, Australia's most popular source of online surf reports, surf forecasts and live surfcam vision. It provides these weather services, for among others, The Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and world weather reports for Bloomberg Television.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Fairfax Digital acquires The Weather Company". Australian-Media.com.au. 2008-06-25. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
  2. "Fairfax Digital Names Head of Strategic Alliances / Weatherzone appoints new Managing Director". Fairfax Digital. 6 October 2010. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
  3. "Weatherzone buys AfricaWeather, forecasts more African acquisitions". =The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 June 2015. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  4. "Total Lightning Network". Weatherzone. Retrieved 17 May 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.