Case Study: High-Resolution Climate Modelling for the Swiss Rail Network
The Challenge: 1960s Infrastructure Standards vs. Future Outlook
The Challenge: 1960s Infrastructure Standards vs. Future Outlook
Short-term weather decisions often depend less on what might happen tomorrow and more on what is already unfolding now.
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°F
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69°
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69°
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79°
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86°
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86°
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80°
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74°
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72°
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°F
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75°
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74°
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84°
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95°
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92°
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87°
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81°
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77°
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SSE |
S |
WSW |
WSW |
SE |
NW |
NW |
WNW |
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mph
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0-5
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1-7
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5-11
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2-12
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1-9
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1-7
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2-7
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3-6
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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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10%
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10%
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5%
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15%
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25%
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30%
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20%
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25%
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in
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12.4 mi
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Overnight into Friday a few clouds are expected, and some more clouds roll across in the course of day. The sun will not be visible. There is only a low chance of Precipitation (around 30%). Temperatures as high as 87 °F are foreseen. With UV-Index rising to 10, sun protection is strongly recommended. At night and for the afternoon light air is noticeable (1 to 4 mph). In the morning blows a light breeze (4 to 8 mph). Winds blowing overnight from North, in the morning from West and during the afternoon from Northwest. The weather forecast for Tabora for Friday is likely to be accurate.
Pressure: 1009 hPa
Timezone: CAT (UTC +02:00h)
Overnight into Friday a few clouds are expected, and some more clouds roll across in the course of day. The sun will not be visible. There is only a low chance of Precipitation (around 30%). Temperatures as high as 87 °F are foreseen. With UV-Index rising to 10, sun protection is strongly recommended. At night and for the afternoon light air is noticeable (1 to 4 mph). In the morning blows a light breeze (4 to 8 mph). Winds blowing overnight from North, in the morning from West and during the afternoon from Northwest. The weather forecast for Tabora for Friday is likely to be accurate.
Pressure: 1009 hPa
Timezone: CAT (UTC +02:00h)
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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.
The location marker is placed on Tabora. 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.
The Challenge: 1960s Infrastructure Standards vs. Future Outlook
Short-term weather decisions often depend less on what might happen tomorrow and more on what is already unfolding now.
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