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WeatherFlow-Tempest – Weekly Recap

WeatherFlow-Tempest – Weekly Recap

WeatherFlow-Tempest is a private weather-technology company specializing in high-resolution, real-time environmental data and analytics, and this weekly summary reviews notable developments. The company’s networks were prominently featured in high-impact storm coverage while it continued outreach in education and community initiatives.

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Multiple LinkedIn posts highlighted how the Tempest sensor network captured a recent East Coast winter storm that met the technical definition of a bomb cyclone. Stations recorded rapid sea-level pressure drops to around 975 mb, hurricane-strength winds at several sites, and a 41.6 mb pressure decline over 24 hours in Nantucket.

WeatherFlow-Tempest reported that its Tempest ProNet, ProNet, and HurrNet observation networks were extensively referenced in National Weather Service storm reports for New England blizzard and high-wind events. In the NWS Boston report, ProNet data accounted for more than half of documented wind observations, with a notable 77 mph peak gust recorded in Wellfleet, Mass.

These data were also cited by multiple media outlets, underscoring growing reliance on dense, professionally sited surface networks for real-time analysis and post-storm verification. This visibility indicates increasing integration of WeatherFlow-Tempest’s infrastructure into professional meteorological workflows and public-facing reporting.

Earlier in the week, the company showcased its network tracking a rapid pattern shift in the Upper Midwest from extreme cold to heavy rainfall nearing 1 inch per hour in drought-affected states. WeatherFlow-Tempest emphasized that granular, event-based rainfall data can support better climate and water-resource analytics for sectors such as agriculture, insurance, utilities, and infrastructure.

The firm also participated in an educational initiative in which Jones-Onslow EMC donated 25 Tempest stations to local elementary schools, providing students and teachers with real-time school-level weather data. While the direct revenue impact is limited, the deployments expand the installed base, strengthen community engagement, and contribute incremental observations to the broader network.

Taken together, the week’s developments underscore WeatherFlow-Tempest’s strengthening role in high-impact weather monitoring, with increased use of its data by government agencies and media potentially supporting demand for its services. Concurrently, educational and community initiatives may enhance brand awareness and long-term market positioning in weather intelligence and climate-risk analytics.

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