US FAA reverses cut in weather-tracking tool funding

Paul

Veteran
Nov 15, 2005
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Pressure from the airline industry has prompted the US Federal Aviation Administration to prolong funding for an en route and terminal weather guidance prototype system.

Yesterday’s decision of the FAA’s air traffic organisation follows an agency announcement on February 22 that the Corridor Integrated Weather System (CIWS) would be cancelled from March 1 due to budget cuts. “The FAA weighed all the issues and decided to keep [CIWS] running because of its benefits to the user community,†the agency’s CIWS team leader Ray Moy says.

“[CIWS] is pretty significant for the airline and air-traffic community. We’re still trying to create a business case, but when the budget started getting cut, [CIWS] was considered a prototype and therefore expendable,†says Moy. CIWS, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratories-developed computer program, provides en route and traffic flow managers with 2h, continually updated forecasts which helps airlines and air-traffic control facilities improved guidance of where to route flights during convective weather periods.

The program was initially designed to mitigate convective weather patters deemed partly responsible for the record airline gridlock recorded in 2000. The FAA’s latest decision now provides CIWS with $1.5 million in funding for the remainder of the fiscal year ending 30 September. Moy says the funding will effectively just keep the prototype system running, but not allow for any expanded capabilities.

Flight Global