Webinar: Managing Weather Risk Across Energy Assets
Weather is hitting energy infrastructure harder, faster and at a greater cost than ever, and a live webinar on 17 June will show operators how to stay one step ahead of it!
Weather is hitting energy infrastructure harder, faster and at a greater cost than ever, and a live webinar on 17 June will show operators how to stay one step ahead of it!
The level of detail available in weather forecasts has increased dramatically in recent years. What once focused on broad regional patterns is increasingly moving towards local, street-scale prediction. Modern forecasts can now identify which urban areas will retain heat overnight, where cold air may accumulate, or which locations face the highest risk of intense rainfall and flooding.
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Icon
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°F
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-24°
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-22°
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-21°
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-23°
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-24°
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-21°
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-20°
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-20°
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°F
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-44°
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-40°
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-42°
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-46°
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-45°
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-39°
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-37°
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-37°
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SSW |
SSW |
SSW |
SSW |
SSW |
S |
S |
SSE |
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mph
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21-33
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20-32
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25-37
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27-39
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25-35
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19-28
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16-24
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18-24
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in
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-
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-
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-
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-
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-
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-
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-
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-
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%
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0%
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0%
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0%
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0%
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0%
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0%
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0%
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0%
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in
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No precipitation expected |
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12.4 mi
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During the night and in the first hours of the day a few clouds are expected, but becoming overcast for this afternoon. The sun will not be visible. Temperatures peaking at -20 °F. The whole day a strong breeze is blowing (25 to 32 mph). From time to time gusts could reach up to 46 mph. Winds blowing overnight from Southwest and by day from South. The weather forecast for Billingane Peaks for Tuesday is expected to be very accurate.
Pressure: 989 hPa
Timezone: GMT+05 (UTC +05:00h)
High wind speeds expected for Billingane Peaks. More Weather Maps
The animation shows the wind conditions of the storm at 200m above ground, which corresponds well with expected gusts at the surface. Choose other time steps to see the forecast of the storm.
The location marker is placed on Billingane Peaks. This animation shows the precipitation radar for the selected time range, as well as a 2h forecast. Orange crosses indicate lightning. Data provided by nowcast.de (available in USA, Europe, Australia). Drizzle or light snow fall might be invisible for the radar. Precipitation intensity is colour coded, ranging from turquoise to red.
You can embed this meteogram into your own website. Customize it here.
The real-time satellite image combines visible light during daytime with infrared radiation during nighttime. At night, the image is not dark as infrared radiation can detect temperature differences. Unfortunately, low clouds and fog are difficult to distinguish from ground temperatures and thus can be almost invisible during the night. Meteosat satellite images for Europe are updated in real-time every 5 minutes. GOES-16/GOES-17 (North & South America) and Himawari (Asia) images update every 10 minutes.
Precipitation is estimated from radar and satellites. Precipitation estimates from satellites are less accurate at night than during daytime.
© 2026 meteoblue, NOAA Satellites GOES-16 and EUMETSAT. Lightning data provided by nowcast.
Weather is hitting energy infrastructure harder, faster and at a greater cost than ever, and a live webinar on 17 June will show operators how to stay one step ahead of it!
The level of detail available in weather forecasts has increased dramatically in recent years. What once focused on broad regional patterns is increasingly moving towards local, street-scale prediction. Modern forecasts can now identify which urban areas will retain heat overnight, where cold air may accumulate, or which locations face the highest risk of intense rainfall and flooding.
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