NEW DELHI :
INDIA and the US
have decided to reactivate the Indian
Ocean Observing
System (IndOOS), a
network of 36
moored buoys in the
high seas to collect
h i g h - r e s o l u t i o n
ocean and atmospheric data for
weather forecasts.
The IndOOS array of buoys fell into neglect and disrepair during the years of the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to gaps in observational data considered crucial by weather forecasters, particularly since the links between the Indian Ocean Dipole phenomenon and monsoon were established.
The reactivation of IndOOSwas discussed last month during a meeting of EarthSciences Secretary M Ravichandran with Rick Spinrad,
Administrator of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration(NOAA) of the US. The moored buoys are part of the Research Moored Array
for African-Asian-Australian
Monsoon Analysis and
Prediction (RAMA) programme that was born out
of a collaboration between
the Ministry of Earth Sciences
and NOAA in 2008. “We want
to reactivate RAMA.
I discussed it with the NOAA chief
during my visit to
Washington in March,”
Ravichandran said.
NOAA has agreed to provide instrumentation and
India will give ship-time from
July for restarting the RAMA
array, he said, adding that
about 60-90 days of ship-time
will be required for the purpose. In an article published
in the Bulletin of American
Meteorological Society
(BAMS), weather forecasters
from several countries wrote
that the pandemic disrupted the deployment and maintenance cruises for the observational array and also resulted in supply chain issues for
procurement and refurbishment of equipment.