The weather can impact all facets of our lives - it can cancel events and even destroy livelihoods - so what if we could control it?
La Niña, a COVID-19 surge and interest rate rises all seem to be trying to ruin Christmas again. But there is some good news for the holiday season.
An American company will build the Bureau of Meteorology's new $77 million super-computer, enabling it to deliver more accurate forecasts and warnings.
The Bureau of Meteorology has released the forecast for Australian autumn, predicting warmer than usual temperatures.
Bring the world to your kitchen with SBS Food. We have recipes and dinner ideas from more than 100 cuisines, plus how to articles, step-by-step video tutorials and blogs.
Much of the east coast of Australia can expect to see heavy rain this week, with flood warnings issued for some catchments in northern NSW. The Bureau of Meteorology predicts above-average rainfall will be a mainstay on the east coast until November.
A place in the US that calls itself The Icebox of the Nation has lived up to that moniker by recording a temperature of -37 degrees.
The US has launched a new satellite to improve the accuracy of weather forecasts; the information will be available to meteorologists across the world.
A new spacecraft will track weather as never before: hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding, volcanic ash clouds, wildfires, lightning storms, even solar flares.
After rain and floods dominated Australia’s past three summers due to La Niña, the United Nations' weather agency has declared the arrival of its opposite, El Niño. Here’s what that means.
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