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Ars Technica Jun 8, 2026 at 11:00 Big Tech Rising Hot

The weather and climate science AI revolution isn’t revolutionary

Machine learning has its limits—how is it being used?

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By Scott K. Johnson Original source
The weather and climate science AI revolution isn’t revolutionary

It feels like there's no escaping AI right now, whether you’re trying to type a sentence without being interrupted by a digital “assistant” or struggling to find a new refrigerator that doesn’t require a Wi-Fi connection for some reason. You’d be forgiven for wondering if we’re in the midst of a quantum leap in tech or whether people are just hyping up a heap of slop. So what should we make of the growing use of AI in weather and climate modeling? The conversation didn't get off to a great start earlier this year when a National Weather Service office posted a forecast map featuring nonexistent cities in Idaho with names like “Whata Bod” and “Orangeotild.” Thankfully, that was just an AI-generated image produced for social media, not the actual forecast model. Meteorologists and climate scientists are not yet being replaced by large language model prompt engineers. Read full article Comments

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Jun 8, 2026 at 11:00 Ars Technica

The weather and climate science AI revolution isn’t revolutionary

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