Podcasts | Babbage

Predicting the weather in a warming world

Our podcast on science and technology. This week, how new technology—including AI and digital twins—will make weather forecasting fit for the 21st century

Image: Getty Images

IN RECENT WEEKS, extreme heat, floods and storms have smashed records and caused devastation around the world. Freak weather events such as these will become more frequent due to climate change—but they are exceptionally hard to predict. How are meteorologists gearing up to face the enormous challenge of predicting the weather in a warming world?

Andrew Charlton-Perez, at the University of Reading in Britain, explains how weather forecasts are made—and why meteorology is such a complicated science. The Economist’s Rachel Dobbs investigates the next frontiers in forecasting. She asks Sam Levang, the chief scientist at Salient Predictions, how artificial intelligence can play a role in improving predictions of the weather. Rachel also visits the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts’s data centre in Bologna, Italy, to understand how a combination of technological approaches will be required to make weather forecasting fit for the 21st century. Alok Jha, The Economist’s science and technology editor, hosts. Runtime: 43 min

Explore more

More from Podcasts

Podcast The Intelligence

President Raisi’s death puts a fork in the road to Iran’s future

Also on the daily podcast: rising tensions around China’s spycraft in Britain and for young folk TikTok is the new LinkedIn

26:18

Podcast Editor’s Picks

Why a murder trial in Kazakhstan has reverberated widely

A handpicked article read aloud from the latest issue of The Economist

3:40


Podcast The Weekend Intelligence

Bombay, open city?

A dispatch from the city of dreams

46:54