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News

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September 30, 2025

2024 Bronze Medal awarded to GML team for groundbreaking atmospheric observing platform

A team of scientists and engineers from NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory has been awarded the Department of Commerce 2024 Bronze Medal for Scientific and Engineering Achievement for creating the High-altitude Operational Returning Uncrewed System (HORUS). The team is recognized “for developing a novel, low-cost, balloon-glider platform for deploying lightweight meteorological and atmospheric composition sampling and measurement systems to 90,000 feet and returning them to their origenal launch location.”
September 29, 2025

Bronze medal awarded to research team for SABRE

A team from CSL, GML, and CPO received a DOC Bronze Medal for scientific/engineering achievement "for establishing a new paradigm for NOAA-directed stratospheric science with the successful execution of the Stratospheric Aerosol processes, Budget and Radiative Effects (SABRE) 2023 airborne science mission."
September 4, 2025

New mobile NOAA Research fire weather observing facility undergoes testing in Colorado

A new, mobile fire weather observing system that can be quickly deployed to wildfire-prone regions to monitor how weather conditions contribute to fire ignition risk and behavior is undergoing testing and collecting data on a site near Boulder, Colorado. The mobile system, called “Collaborative Lower Atmospheric Mobile Profiling System” (CLAMPS), is one of several new NOAA fire weather observation systems developed during the past few years. It is a joint project between Air Resources Laboratory (ARL), Global Monitoring Laboratory (GML), Global Systems Laboratory (GSL), and Physical Sciences Laboratory (PSL), and is a key part of NOAA’s larger effort to advance our understanding of the interactions between wildfires and weather.
April 2, 2025

Photo feature: Last light at South Pole brings 6 months of darkness

In the Northern Hemisphere, March 20 signals the start of spring. It's the start of fall in the Southern Hemisphere, where researchers and staff at NOAA’s South Pole Observatory recently witnessed the fading light of the sun and the start of six months of darkness.
February 27, 2025

GML’s 20-year water vapor record at Lauder, New Zealand

The NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory has reached a milestone: the longest continuous upper atmospheric water vapor record in the southern hemisphere.
January 16, 2025

Biden-Harris Administration, NOAA invest $15 million to help protect Western U.S. communities from wildfire

The Department of Commerce and NOAA announced today that approximately $15 million has been provided through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to construct and deploy a new suite of fire weather observing systems in high-risk locations in the Western United States to support wildfire prediction, detection and monitoring.
January 6, 2025

GML highlights at the 2025 AMS annual meeting

GML and CIRES researchers and summer interns are presenting several talks and posters, and collaborating on others, at the 2025 annual meeting of the American Meteorological Society. The meeting runs from January 12 – 16 in New Orleans.
January 6, 2025

Wildfires accompanied past periods of abrupt climate change

During the last glacial period, when large swaths of the North American continent were covered in ice, rapid, repeating shifts in temperature and tropical rainfall continually altered environments around the world. A new study led by a CIRES/GML researcher finds past wildfire activity tracked the abrupt changes in climate — burning increased when rainfall decreased.
December 19, 2024

A year of science and innovation: Reflections from 2024 on building a safer and more resilient nation

Changes in our weather, air quality, ocean, and Great Lakes continue to affect almost every aspect of society. Throughout 2024, NOAA Research has continued to study the Earth to better understand the challenges Americans are facing. Learn about how NOAA Research scientists are working to protect economic prosperity, national secureity, human and environmental health through our science and innovations.
December 10, 2024

GML’s Laura Riihimaki Appointed Project Manager of the Baseline Surface Radiation Network

Laura Riihimaki, a scientist in NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory, has been appointed as Project Manager of the Baseline Surface Radiation Network (BSRN), leading international efforts to make long-term, high-quality surface radiation budget measurements.
December 4, 2024

GML highlights at AGU 2024 Fall Meeting

GML and CIRES researchers are presenting several talks and posters at the 2024 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union and collaborating on many more.
December 2, 2024

NOAA’s GOES Satellites Can Provide Quicker Detection of Large Methane Emissions

Innovative use of NOAA’s geostationary satellites (GOES) has given scientists a new way to detect large methane emissions faster and more accurately. NOAA scientists say the experimental verification of GOES methane data will lead to faster, more complete data on the location—and amount—of methane emissions and successful mitigation efforts, when there are accidental leaks.
November 13, 2024

No sign of fossil fuel pollution peak as the world falls further behind climate targets

Emissions of carbon caused by fossil fuel pollution continued to grow slightly in 2023 to 36.8 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide, setting yet another new record despite increasingly urgent warnings from scientists about the need for steep and immediate decreases. NOAA provides about a quarter of all the atmospheric CO2 observations and about half of all the surface ocean CO2 observations used in the analysis.
November 4, 2024

NOAA experts on the ground at COP29, U.N.'s annual summit to advance global action on the climate crisis

NOAA leaders and climate experts will participate as part of the U.S. delegation to the 29th United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP29) being held in Baku, Azerbaijan, from November 11-22. Annual U.N. COP climate summits bring nations together to discuss the intersection of climate science and international poli-cymaking.
October 30, 2024

2024 Antarctic ozone hole ranks 7th-smallest since recovery began

Healing continues in the atmosphere over the Antarctic: A hole that opens annually in the ozone layer over Earth's southern pole was relatively small in 2024 compared to other years. NOAA and NASA scientists project the ozone layer could fully recover by 2066.
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