| MARINE
SAFETY INFORMATION BROADCASTS
The U.S. Coast Guard and other government agencies broadcast
different kinds of maritime safety warnings, using a variety
of different radio systems to ensure coverage of different
ocean areas for which the United States has responsibility,
and ensure all ships of every size and nationality can receive
this safety information. All broadcasts except those over
VHF and MF radiotelephone are made by computer.
High Frequency Weather
Notice
In April 2007 the Coast Guard issued a Notice requesting
public comments on the need to continue HF radio broadcasts
of weather forecasts. Comments closed on August 24, 2007.
A business case analysis report was prepaired based upon the
responses. Please see our High
Frequency Weather Broadcast Information page for more
information.
Coastal Maritime Safety Broadcasts
VHF Marine Radio Broadcasts. Urgent marine navigational and
weather information is broadcast over VHF channel 22A (157.1
MHZ) from over 200 sites covering the coastal areas of the
U.S., including the Great Lakes, major inland waterways, Puerto
Rico, Alaska, Hawaii and Guam. Broadcasts are first announced
over the distress, safety and calling channel 16 before they
are made. All ships in U.S. waters over 20m in length are
required to monitor VHF channel 16, and must have radios capable
of tuning to the VHF simplex channel 22A.
NOAA
Weather Radio (NWR) is a nationwide network of radio stations
broadcasting continuous weather information direct from a
nearby National Weather Service office. NWR broadcasts National
Weather Service warnings, watches, forecasts and other hazard
information 24 hours a day. In addition, you may visit the
NOAA/NWS
Marine Product Dissemination Information web page (USCG
broadcast schedules for VHF, MF, HF, NAVTEX, and HF NBDP (radiotelex)
are included here) or obtain NGA Broadcast Warnings.
Medium
Frequency Radiotelephone. Urgent marine information broadcasts
are made over the single sideband frequency 2670 kHz, after
first being announced on the distress, safety and calling
frequency 2182 kHz.
NAVTEX text broadcasts on 518 kHz,
recognized by the GMDSS, cover most
coastal areas of the U.S.
High Seas Broadcasts
Weather forecasts and warnings are broadcast over scheduled
HF
radiotelephone channels from Coast Guard Communication
Stations using a very distinctive and recognizable computer-synthesized
voice dubbed "Perfect Paul". Listen
to "Perfect Paul" (17 second wav audio file, 142kb)
Weather charts and ice charts are broadcast from Coast Guard
Communications Stations via HF radiofacsimilie. National Weather
Service weather charts are also available
from the World Wide Web. The radiofacsimile product and
schedule information is below:
For information concerning other U.S. broadcasts, see the
National
Weather Service.
Marine Radiofacsimile Policy: The Coast Guard, which
broadcasts radiofacsimile information from five Communications
Stations, will continue these broadcasts to meet the needs
of its cutters, and to meet public safety needs as described
in Chapter V of the Safety of Life at Sea Convention, unless
otherwise directed.
Effective Oct 18, 2005 at 0533 UTC, the radiofacsimile broadcast
from Station KVM70 Honolulu, Hawaii will be modified to broadcast
on the assigned frequencies of 9982.5 and 11090.0 kHz beginning
at 0533 UTC and 11090.0 and 16135.0 kHz beginning at 1733
UTC. Broadcasts will no longer be made on 23331.5 kHz. Subtract
1.9 kHz for carrier frequencies. See
http://weather.noaa.gov/pub/fax/hfhi.txt for details on
the complete schedule or copy the on-air schedule broadcast
at 1045 and 2018 UTC.
HF
Radiotelex (HF SITOR). Weather, NAVAREA, HydroLant, HydroPac
and other navigational safety text information, recognized
by the GMDSS, are broadcast over scheduled GMDSS HF narrow-band
direct printing channels from Coast Guard Communications Stations.
Inmarsat-C SafetyNET.
Worldwide weather, navigational, ice and search and rescue
text information, recognized by GMDSS, are broadcast over
the Inmarsat
satellite system.
Marine
Product Dissemination Information
The U.S.
National Weather Service has a new World Wide Web page
listing sources and schedules for receiving marine meterological
information by a variety of means, including Internet, radio,
satellite, computer bulletin board, and others.
Meteorological Observations
Even with satellites, meteorologists cannot accurately prepare
marine weather forecasts without accurate ship weather reports.
For this reason, the National Weather Service sponsors the
United States Voluntary Observing Ship Program (VOS). Ships
participating in the VOS program provide meteorological and
oceanographic reports while at sea. These observations form
the basis of marine weather forecasts in coastal and high
seas areas. For more information, see the NWS
Port Meteorological Officers and Voluntary Observing Ship
Program Page. See the NAVAREA
Chart, a 40k gif file.
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