Who We Are
Climate Impact Company is a leading provider of analysis and consultation to industry, mainly energy and agriculture deciphering model data and climate signals to produce our own products for the specific needs of our clientele. Our forecast process is unique with an impressive track record since Climate Impact Company formed in May of 2004.
What We Do
Climate Impact Company is obsessed with making the best month-to-month and seasonal climate forecast possible for all sectors of the globe. We branch the seasonal climate outlooks to the short-range forecasts with our unique week 2-4 outlook. Climate Impact Company monitors and forecasts all climate signals from ENSO to NAO/PNA to AMO/PDO to soil moisture and snow cover. Climate Impact Company has a 2-decade track record of forecasting seasonal tropical cyclone activity including ACE index.
Why We Are Different
Climate Impact Company has unmatched experience and confidence using our unique climate forecasting approach. Our process has been adapted to the needs of industry. Our forecasts are global. We branch the seasonal outlooks to short-range forecasts with our unique week 2-4 outlook. We do not provide models. We provide forecasts encompassing all aspects of the environment plus the models to provide you with the best climate assessment possible.
Latest News
Climate Impact Company Chart of the Day
Subsidence/Low Relative Humidity Squash North Atlantic Tropics July to Mid-August
The North Atlantic basin is quiet through mid-August (since July 1st) due to the subsidence pattern in the deep tropics and subtropics in the vicinity of the Bahamas. The subsidence is well-represented by the low relative humidity in the middle atmosphere (600 MB) in these regions.
Climate Impact Company Climate Research
Why Have Week-2 U.S. CDD Forecasts Been Too Hot?
Week-2 ahead U.S. population weight CDD forecasts have routinely been too hot for most of meteorological summer so far. Speculated is forecast models are hot-biased due to stronger than existing dry soil moisture conditions which produce short-term errors that grow with time. NOAA soil moisture analysis varies from dramatically dry to realistic dry.