Federal News
NOAA Modernizes Weather Forecasting with Cloud Contracts
March 24, 2026
NOAA's National Weather Service (NWS) has awarded contracts in March 2026 to develop and implement cloud-based data and application services, including the NWS HIVE and NWS CIRRUS systems. This modernization effort aims to replace legacy, hardwired forecasting infrastructure dating back to the 1990s with scalable, mobile, and AI-integrated cloud technologies. The upgrades will enhance nationwide weather data access and forecasting capabilities across multiple NWS facilities such as local Weather Forecast Offices, River Forecast Centers, Center Weather Service Units at major airports, and National Centers.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should note the shift toward cloud infrastructure modernization within a major federal weather agency, signaling increased demand for cloud services, AI integration, and scalable data platforms.
- The awarded contracts represent opportunities for vendors specializing in cloud migration, weather data analytics, and AI-enabled applications.
- Agencies and contractors involved in federal IT modernization can leverage this initiative as a benchmark for similar cloud transformation projects.
- Organizations should consider the implications for interoperability and data integration across distributed weather service facilities nationwide.
For far too long American weather forecasters have relied on decades-old, hardwired technology to provide critical data to the American public.
— Howard Lutnick, Secretary of Commerce
This transition to cloud-based technology is a monumental improvement from the current structure, which was first implemented in the 1990s.
— Neil Jacobs, Ph.D, NOAA Administrator
Agencies
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Weather Service, Department of Commerce