| The Marine Unit

Marine Observations
Irish Marine Data Buoy Network
In Ireland most of the marine observations
over the past 100 years have been from ships. Each observation consists
of visual reports of all or a selection of the following parameters:-
the sea height and sea period, swell height, direction and period,
wind speed and direction, cloud type, amount and height, visibility
and general weather such as fog, rain, snow etc., and measured observations
of pressure, air and sea temperature.
The Marine Unit is responsible
for Met Éireann's Port Meteorological Officers who are based
at several Offices around the country who train ships' crews to make
weather observations.
Increasingly, over the past 10 years, the human observers are being
supplemented by automatic systems that compile the information from sensors
and send it to Met Éireann via satellite.
In 1999 Met Éireann, together with some funding from the Dept.
of Communications, Marine and Natural Resources, placed an Automatic
Weather Station (AWS) on board the Marine Institute's RV Celtic Voyager.
This AWS sends hourly observations of wind speed and direction (corrected
for the motion of the ship), air pressure, characteristic and tendency,
air and dew point temperature and sea temperature.
Continuous
long term observations are so important for forecasting and climatology
that in November 2000 Met Éireann, in conjunction with the Marine
Institute, the Dept. of Communications, Marine & Natural Resources
and the UK Met Office launched the first in the series of 5 data buoys
to be placed off our shores.
The first buoy M1, is located roughly 60 miles west of the Aran Islands. The
buoy has been reporting hourly to Met Éireann since 0900UTC, on
the 6th of November 2000.
The buoy reports wind speed - mean and gust,
wind direction, pressure and pressure characteristic and tendency, temperature
- air, sea and dew point calculated from relative humidity, significant
wave height and wave period.
The second buoy M2, was deployed in the Irish Sea 20 Nautical Miles east of Howth Head, in April 2001.
The third buoy, M3 is located approximately 31 nautical miles southwest of Mizen
Head and was deployed in July 2002.
The 4th in the series, the M4, was deployed in April, approximately
10 miles west of Rossan Point.
M5, the fifth buoy, was deployed in October 2004.
M6, the latest buoy, was deployed approximately 210 nautical miles westsouthwest
off Slyne head on 25th September 2006.
Eventually all buoys will have the added capability of measuring oceanographic
parameters, such as the speed of ocean currents and the temperature
and salinity of the water at various depths.
Real-time hourly buoy observations are available on
this site or Marine
Buoy Data (on Marine Institute website).
Buoy Locations
Coastal Marine Observations:
Apart from our own coastal synoptic stations at Malin Head, Rosslare,
Roches Point, Valentia and Belmullet, we also receive additional
observations from other Marine Organisations such as: Lighthouse visibilities
from
the Commissioners of Irish Lights; winds, temperature, pressure,
humidity
and rainfall from the AWS on Dun Laoghaire East Pier from the Harbour
Company; winds, waves, water levels, visibility, pressure and
temperature from Marathon Gas Platform.
E-SURFMAR - Surface Marine Programme of EUMETNET (The Network of European Meteorological Services)
DBCP - Data Buoy Cooperation Panel |