Severe Weather Port Study Effort Expands into Africa

The U.S. Navy operates throughout the world and has ships in any number of ports at any moment in time. Environmental phenomena such as strong winds, high waves, storm surge, restrictions to visibility, and thunderstorms can be hazardous to these



By Lieutenant Commander Christopher L. Gabriel, USN U.S. AFRICOM - Current Actions Branch, Operations & Logistics Directorate STUTTGART, Germany May 08, 2009
The U.S. Navy operates throughout the world and has ships in any number of ports at any moment in time. Environmental phenomena such as strong winds, high waves, storm surge, restrictions to visibility, and thunderstorms can be hazardous to these ships. These hazards are frequently present both while in port, or while maneuvering in or out of port.

Because the U.S. Navy recognizes this as a serious concern to ship captains, the Marine Meteorology Division of the Naval Research Laboratory, Monterey, CA evaluates the severe weather suitability of numerous ports around the world, and documents the results in the form of Severe Weather Port studies. These studies are sent directly to the Commander, Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command, and provide decision-making guidance for ship captains, as well as environmental information for operational forecasters.

The port studies are also available on the World Wide Web and in CD form, and are widely used by the U.S. Navy and U.S. Coast Guard, as well as the small boating and maritime communities throughout the world.

With the development of Africa Partnership Station, the severe weather port study effort has broadened to include African ports of interest. Several port studies have already been completed (see Mindelo, Cape Verde for example: http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/port_studies/medports/africa/Mindelo/index.html ).

Currently, African ports are included in the “European Severe Weather Port Guide” http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/port_studies/medports/index.html ); however, as additional ports are studied, an “African Severe Weather Port Guide” will be produced and become a vital element to the Marine Safety & Security goals of U.S. Naval Forces Africa and U.S. Africa Command. The ultimate goal is to document port conditions throughout Africa, to ensure that the global maritime community has essential information on environmental hazards in each port, enabling them to safely operate in African ports.

Sources: Naval Research Laboratory, Marine Meteorology Division, Monterey, CA and Current Actions Branch, Operations & Logistics Directorate, U.S. Africa Command
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