SA Weather Service battered by faulty equipment, decries CEO

schumi

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Pretoria – The South African Weather Service (SAWS) has blamed the poor state of their equipment for failing to warn citizens earlier of the stormy weather that devastated parts of Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal.

SAWS CEO Jerry Lengoasa on Thursday said although a severe weather warning for the catastrophic thunderstorm was issued, he conceded that the message could have been delivered earlier.

He said when the storm system started forming, one of the weather service's radars was down, which meant that the sending out of the warning was delayed by a couple of hours.

"I can say we lost a little bit of time, a couple of hours, by not having it ready," Lengoasa told News24 after a media briefing at the SAWS head office in Pretoria.

"However, because of our capability of also using satellite - the watch which basically says be aware there is an imminent system coming - [the message] was already issued on Sunday."

Lengoasa said warnings were sent out on social and news media and the National Disaster Risk Management Centre was also notified of a weather watch.

However, he believes this critical and potentially life-saving message did not reach enough of South Africans, in particular, those who needed the information the most.

'Hardly scratched the surface'


"It is abundantly clear that we hardly scratched the surface of those that needed to receive the information, before the events for rapid decision-making in the face of the hazard."

Lengoasa said Treasury was approached for funding, adding that the SAWS urgently needed R30m in order to execute plans and systems to disseminate warnings to a larger audience.

He said up to 80% of disaster risk management financing and expenditure was often spent on response and recovery and "not on early warning systems of which the weather service is a key and strategic part".

The storm on Tuesday, which claimed the lives of eight people in KZN, has been classified as a supercell storm, which is the most intense class of a thunderstorm.

Three tornadoes were observed in Gauteng, Mpumalanga and the Free State.

Strong winds, hail

SAWS issued a weather watch on Sunday afternoon for Monday that severe thunderstorms would hit parts of the North West, eastern parts of the Free State, northern and central parts of KwaZulu-Natal and parts of Gauteng, Limpopo and Mpumalanga.

This was upgraded to a severe thunderstorm warning on Monday afternoon as thunderstorms moved into the Gauteng province from the west.

The system then moved rapidly east affecting KZN, Durban in particular, on Tuesday, with severe urban flooding and high winds. Durban alone saw 108mm of rain in a 24-hour period.

News24
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/N...ered-by-faulty-equipment-decries-ceo-20171012
 
I can confirm that the SAWS Durban radar has been offline for many weeks. Most of the rest of the story is self-justifying rubbish IMO...
 
The mind naturally wanders to ask why it was offline ... What combination of lack of maintenance and qualified operators, antique and unreliable equipment, poor management, a couldn't-care-less attitude by mgt and staff in cushy protected civil service jobs, poor communications systems and processes, and so on ...
 
SA Weather Service battered by faulty equipment, decries CEO

With the track record for maintenance in this country, I'm not surprised at all.
 
10 years is not exactly old for a radar system. Sounds like they are fishing for a nice fat tender to replace everything rather than doing their jobs and maintaining it.
 
1. Ask for R30mil
2. Hire an auntie to 'disseminate info to the masses' via twitter
3. Profit??
 
If only they'd stop wasting money like paying off their ex-CEO and maybe employing their allocation toward operational activities and not buying handbags and ****.
 
If only they'd stop wasting money like paying off their ex-CEO and maybe employing their allocation toward operational activities and not buying handbags and ****.

This is "AffirmativeAction" for you. What exactly did you expect?
 
Sometimes that's all thjat's required, yes.
In my experience that is all you ever do. I'm yet to see you add anything meaningful to a conversation. To be fair to you there are topics you seem proficient at but let's not go down that road because it is down.
 
How hard can it be for them to pull back the curtains in the morning and look out the window?!

/runs
 
If only they'd stop wasting money like paying off their ex-CEO and maybe employing their allocation toward operational activities and not buying handbags and ****.

Yep. But Jerry's trying to put it all back together. Mammoth task ahead. Even throwing money at it might not solve everything.
Letting the public know is a huge step forward; it tends to spur on the powers that be.
 
In my experience that is all you ever do. I'm yet to see you add anything meaningful to a conversation. To be fair to you there are topics you seem proficient at but let's not go down that road because it is down.

I added 'LOL' to your comment that AA and corruption has got nothing to do with each other. What does that tell you? Perhaps that I think that it's a stupid question from your side? I don't know, you tell me.

Although the idea behind AA is not theft and corruption, there clearly is a very strong link. My opinion.
 
So they saw a storm approaching, but could not be bothered to get their equipment working :erm:
Just another SOE wasting tax payer money.
We really need a clean sweep of all these SOEs
 
So they saw a storm approaching, but could not be bothered to get their equipment working :erm:
Just another SOE wasting tax payer money.
We really need a clean sweep of all these SOEs

Consistent results even with an increase in severe weather patterns causes failure to respond.

Wait for the day a multi vortex monster with grape fruit size hail and whatnot tears through a city like the 1990 Welkom situation. Does anyone really think south Africans who constantly watch and enjoy our little static storms or the SAWS is actually prepared for a event like that?
 
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