Benefits and Beneficiaries of the Oklahoma Mesonet: A Multisectoral Ripple Effect Analysis

Author:

Ziolkowska Jadwiga R.1,Fiebrich Christopher A.2,Carlson J. D.3,Melvin Andrea D.2,Sutherland Albert J.3,Kloesel Kevin A.2,McManus Gary D.2,Illston Bradley G.2,Hocker James E.2,Reyes Reuben2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography and Environmental Sustainability, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

2. Oklahoma Mesonet, Oklahoma Climatological Survey, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

3. Oklahoma Mesonet, Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma

Abstract

Abstract Since the Oklahoma Mesonet (the state’s automated mesoscale weather station network) was established in 1994, it has served a number of diverse groups and provided public services to foster weather preparedness, education, and public safety, while also supporting decision-making in agricultural production and wildland fire management. With 121 monitoring stations across the state, the Oklahoma Mesonet has developed an array of technologies to observe a variety of atmospheric and soil variables in 5- to 30-min intervals. These consistent observations have been especially critical for predicting and preparing for extreme weather events like droughts, floods, ice storms, and severe convective storms as well as for development of value-added tools. The tools, outreach programs, and mesoscale data have been widely utilized by the general public, state decision-makers, public safety officials, K–12 community, agricultural sector, and researchers, thus generating wide societal and economic benefits to many groups. Based on practical application examples of weather information provided by the Oklahoma Mesonet, this paper analyzes both benefits generated by Oklahoma Mesonet information to the public and decision-makers and ripple effects (spreading amplified outcomes/implications) of those benefits in the short and long term. The paper further details ongoing and anticipated Oklahoma Mesonet innovations as a response to changing needs for weather-related information over time, especially as a result of technological developments and weather variability.

Funder

NSF

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Global and Planetary Change

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