POWERING SMARTER WEATHER DECISIONS
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Our specialised weather solutions

Purpose-built to keep your businesses informed, safe, efficient and profitable

Do you have the most industry-relevant weather data underpinning your planning and operations?

Weatherzone Business, a DTN company, has been providing weather intelligence and innovative forecasting systems to Australian businesses since 1998.

Every industry has unique needs when it comes to the complexities of weather risk and opportunity. We identify your business needs and deliver precision insights to optimise your efficiency and response.

We serve an array of industries and enterprises, each with their own individual relationship to the weather, and the risk and opportunities it creates. Choose from a wide offering of business weather solutions that cover everything from the safety of your teams and assets, to staffing, operations and maintenance planning. We are driven to give you full situational awareness of the weather and the capacity to make informed critical decisions, quickly.

Aviation

Accredited and actionable weather intelligence – delivered direct to air and ground crew – supporting optimal safety and staffing.

Mining

Severe weather alerting, forecasting and EPA-approved blast dispersion modelling, custom-built for mine sites to mitigate risk.

Energy

Proven lightning alerting, power generation forecasting, severe weather, solar and wind data to support your operations and on-site safety.

Energy Renewables

Asset monitoring, solar actuals, PR and yield, power generation forecasts; lightning, flood, severe weather and fire alerting for peak safety and efficiency.

Energy Power Networks & Utilities

Real-time monitoring of severe weather and lightning alerting, with the ability to precisely anticipate disruptions and supply demand.

Energy Trading & Risk

Power generation and weather forecasting with updates and granularity down to 5 minutes. Full risk overviews and long-term outlooks to support your predictions and profits.

Marine

Metocean services, data driven precision forecasting and alerting for offshore oil, gas or wind, shipping and port operators – keeping you, your team and assets safe.

Forestry & Emergency

Actionable weather intelligence and precise lightning alerting to enable the speed and accuracy of critical decision making in the field.

Insurance

Historical weather reporting to verify claims.

Media

Engaging and reliable weather content to bring customers back to your media platform day after day.

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Latest news

Satisfy your weather obsession with these news headlines from around the nation, and the world.

Summery Sydney, wintry Melbourne

It’s been one of those days when Australia’s two largest cities could hardly have been more different in terms of weather. Never mind the tedious old arguments about the food, coffee, culture, sport, traffic, scenery and the rest of it in the two cities. On this autumn Wednesday, Melbourne feels like winter while Sydney feels […]

Rainfall to soak some parched areas of WA

Rain will soak parts of WA over the coming week, although forecast models are struggling to agree on whether this burst of wet weather will bring much-needed rain to parched Perth. This rainfall will be caused by a low pressure trough extending from the Kimberley down to southwestern WA from late Thursday, with a low […]

Tassie snow, Melbourne temps go low

Snow has fallen in Tasmania, while Melbourne has experienced a dramatic temperature drop as a cold front whipped through Tasmania and southern Victoria overnight. This was the Wednesday morning scene on the slopes of Ben Lomond, Tasmania’s only commercial ski resort, about an hour out of Launceston. Not enough snow for skiing, but the cafe […]

Australia’s tropical cyclone season coming to an end

The 2023-24 Australian tropical cyclone season is almost over and while it was a quiet season based on overall numbers, some of the landfalling systems had a big impact. The Australian tropical cyclone season officially runs from November until April. During this time, we usually see an average of about 9 to 10 tropical cyclones […]