'METAR' (from the
French, "message d’observation météorologique régulière pour l’aviation,") is a format for reporting
weather information. METAR means "
aviation routine
weather report" and is predominantly used by
pilots in fulfillment of a part of a pre-flight weather briefing, and by
meteorologists, who use aggregated METAR information to assist in
weather forecasting.
METAR reports usually come from
airports. Typically, reports are generated once an hour; however, if conditions change significantly, they may be updated in special reports called SPECI's. Some reports are encoded by an
Automated Surface Observing System located at airports, military bases and other sites. Some locations still use augmented observations, which are recorded by digital sensors and encoded via software, but are reviewed by certified weather observers or forecasters prior to being transmitted. Observations may also be taken by trained observers or forecasters who manually observe and encode their observations prior to their being transmitted.
History
The METAR format was introduced
1 January 1968 internationally and has been modified several times since.
North American countries continued to use a Surface Aviation Observation (SAO) for current weather conditions until
1 June 1996 when this report was replaced with an approved variant of the METAR agreed upon in a 1989
Geneva agreement.
Naming
The word METAR is from the French, "message d’observation météorologique régulière pour l’aviation," and is thought to have originated as a contraction from MÉTéorologique ("Weather") Aviation Régulière ("Routine"). The
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) may consider it to be erroneous to abbreviate METAR as METeorological Aerodrome Report. The FAA and
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) specifically define a METAR as an "aviation routine weather report," an approximate translation of the French.
Information contained in a METAR
A typical METAR report contains data for the
temperature,
dew point,
wind,
precipitation,
cloud cover and heights,
visibility, and
barometric pressure. A METAR report may also contain information on precipitation amounts,
lightning, and other information that would be of interest to pilots or meteorologists such as
Colour States.
In addition, a short period forecast called a ''TREND'' may be added at the end of the METAR covering likely changes in weather conditions in the two hours following the observation. These are in the same format as a
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF).
The complement to METAR reports, reporting forecasted weather rather than current weather, are
TAFs. METARs and TAFs are used in
VOLMET broadcasts.
Regulation
METAR code is regulated by Federal Meteorological Handbook No. 1 (FMH-1) and the
World Meteorological Organization (WMO) aviation routine weather reports (FM-15 METAR) and aviation selected special weather reports (FM-16 SPECI) codes.
International METAR Code
The following is an example METAR from
Burgas Airport in
Burgas,
Bulgaria, and was taken on
February 4,
2005 at 16:00
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
'METAR LBBG 041600Z 12003MPS 310V290 1400 R04/P1500N R22/P1500U +SN BKN022 OVC050 M04/M07 Q1020 NOSIG 9949//91='
★ 'METAR' indicates that the following is a standard hourly observation.
★ 'LBBG' is the
ICAO airport code for Burgas Airport.
★ '041600Z' indicates the
date of the
month is the 4th and the
time of
day is 1600
Zulu time, 4:00PM
Greenwich Mean Time, or 6:00PM
Eastern European Time.
★ '12003MPS' indicates the wind
direction is from 120
degrees
true (
east-
southeast) at a
speed of 3
meters per second.
★ '310V290' indicates the wind direction is varying from 310 degrees true (northwest) through 120 degrees true (east-southeast) to 290 degrees true (west-northwest).
★ '1400' indicates the
prevailing visibility is 1400
metres.
★ 'R04/P1500N' indicates the
Runway visual range (RVR) along
Runway 04 is 1500 meters and not changing significantly.
★ 'R22/P1500U' indicates RVR along Runway 22 is 1500 meters and rising.
★ '+SN' indicates
snow is falling at a heavy intensity.
★ 'BKN022' indicates a broken cloud layer at 2,200
feet above ground level (agl).
★ 'OVC050' indicates an unbroken cloud layer (overcast) at 5,000 feet above ground level.
★ 'M04/M07' indicates the temperature is minus 4
degrees
Celsius and the dewpoint is minus 7 degrees Celsius.
★ 'Q1020' indicates the current barometric pressure extrapolated to
sea level is 1020
millibars.
★ 'NOSIG' is an example of a TREND forecast which is appended to METARs at stations while a forecaster is on watch. NOSIG means that no significant change is expected to the reported conditions within the next 2 hours.
★ '9949//91' indicates runway status. Format: abcdefgh 'ab'=runway heading, 'c'=nature of coating (4=dry snow), 'd'=surface covered in percent (9= 51-100% of rwy covered), 'ef'=thickness of coating in millimeters (// stands for either not measurable or not affecting usage of rwy) 'gh'=braking index (91=bad braking index i.e grip on rwy)
★ '=' indicates the end of the METAR report
United States/Canada METAR Code
North American metars deviate slightly from the WMO (who write the code on behalf of the
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)) FM 15-XII code. Details listed in the FAA's
Aeronautical Information Manual (AIM). This METAR example is from
Trenton-Mercer Airport near
Trenton,
New Jersey, and was taken on
December 5,
2003 at 18:53 UTC.
'METAR KTTN 051853Z 04011KT 1/2SM VCTS SN FZFG BKN003 OVC010 M02/M02 A3006 RMK AO2 TSB40 SLP176 P0002 T10171017='
★ 'METAR' indicates that the following is a standard hourly observation.
★ 'KTTN' indicates the report came from
Trenton-Mercer Airport, near the city of
Trenton, New Jersey in the continental
United States.
★ '051853Z' indicates the date of the month is the 5th and the time of day is 1853 Zulu time, 6:53PM Greenwich Mean Time, or 1:53PM
Eastern Standard Time.
★ '04011KT' indicates the wind direction is from 40 degrees true (northeast) at a speed of 11
knots (approximately 13
statute miles per hour).
★ '1/2SM' indicates the prevailing visibility is 0.5
statute miles.
★ 'VCTS' indicates there is a
thunderstorm in the vicinity (within 10SM, but beyond 5SM).
★ 'SN' indicates snow is falling at a moderate intensity.
★ 'FZFG' indicates the presence of freezing
fog.
★ 'BKN003' indicates a broken cloud layer at 300 feet above ground level.
★ 'OVC010' indicates an overcast cloud layer at 1,000 feet above ground level.
★ 'M02/M02' indicates the temperature is minus 2 degrees Celsius and the dewpoint is minus 2 degrees Celsius.
★ 'A3006' indicates the
altimeter setting is 30.06
inches of mercury.
''Note that what follows is not part of the international format. This example is particular to the United States, a format not shared with Canada.''
★ 'RMK' indicates the remarks section follows.
★ 'AO2' indicates that the station has an automated precipitation
sensor.
★ 'TSB40' indicates the thunderstorm began 40
minutes after the top of the hour at 1840 Zulu time, 6:40PM Greenwich Mean Time, or 1:40PM Eastern Standard Time.
★ 'SLP176' indicates the current barometric pressure extrapolated to sea level is 1017.6 millibars.
★ 'P0002' indicates that 0.02
inches of
liquid-equivalent precipitation accumulated during the last hour.
★ 'T10171017' indicates the temperature is 29 degrees
Fahrenheit (converted to minus 1.7 degrees Celsius) and the dewpoint is 29 degrees Fahrenheit (converted to minus 1.7 degrees Celsius).
★ '=' indicates the end of the METAR report.
See also
★
Colour State
★
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF)
External links
;Format specifications
★
OFCM.gov - Complete documentation on the METAR format
★
NOAA.gov - Information on METAR and
TAF reports. Also provides a link to current metar reports and cycle files.
;Software libraries
★
Perl modules for parsing METAR reports at the
CPAN website
★
PhpWeather is a
PHP application (with a
GNU GPL licence) that parses METAR reports.
★
pymetar python library for METAR fetching and parsing
;Current reports
★
The Met Office - METARs and TAFs for the UK (requires free registraton)
★
Nav Canada aviation weather site - provides METARs and TAFs for Canada (and some international stations)
★
MyMetar.com - weather mashup providing METARs, TAFs and radar images from a variety of sources; weather via XML too.
★
AC Network Weather - Current TAFs and METARs for selected airports in Canada, the United States, and around the world
★
Airspace V - Current METARs and TAFs for more than 6.600 airports on Google map
★
Allmetsat - Current METARs and TAFs for more than 4000 airports around the world