In June 1976, in response to press reports predicting a Little Ice Age, the World Meteorological Organization issued a warning that a very significant warming of global climate was probable. [1]
To facilitate worldwide cooperation in the establishment of networks of stations for making meteorological observations as well as hydrological and other geophysical observations related to meteorology, and to promote the establishment and maintenance of centers charged with the provision of meteorological and related services;
To promote the establishment and maintenance of systems for the rapid exchange of meteorological and related information;
To promote standardization of meteorological and related observations and to ensure the uniform publication of observations and statistics;
To further the application of meteorology to aviation, shipping, water problems, agriculture and other human activities;
To promote activities in operational hydrology and to further close co-operation between Meteorological and hydrological Services;
To encourage research and training in meteorology and, as appropriate, in related fields, and to assist in coordinating the international aspects of such research and training.
The WMO Member countries have a Commission for Basic Systems (CBS) meeting every two years, in which new recommended code changes, telecommunication protocol recommendations, and Abbreviated Heading Table updates are approved. After approval these changes are entered into the WMO codes manual 306 and 386. The last meeting of CBS was held in Geneva, Switzerland.
In keeping with its mandate to promote the standardization of meteorological observations, the WMO maintains numerous code forms for the representation and exchange of meteorological, oceanographical, and hydrological data. The traditional code forms, such as SYNO and TEMP, are character-based and their coding is position-based. Newer WMO code forms are designed for portability, extensibility and universality. These are BUFR, CREX, and, for gridded geo-positioned data, GRIB.
World Meteorological Day
World Meteorological Day is held annually on March 23.
The WMO is being investigated by Swiss authorities over allegations of vote-buying in its election process. Swiss prosecutors are investigating whether delegates at the WMO received payments from a former employee, Muhammad Hassan, to sway the outcome of the 2003 election. Hassan, a Sudanese national, served as chief of the fellowship program in WMO's training department and is suspected of stealing $3.5 million from the WMO. [2]