Weather Research and Forecasting Innovation Reauthorization Act of 2026
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Weather Research and Forecasting Innovation Reauthorization Act is a very broad NOAA-centered reauthorization. It redefines weather data and public-safety priorities, requires recurring weather research and development planning, reauthorizes and adds a precipitation forecast improvement program, creates or expands next-generation numerical weather prediction, Radar Next, data void coverage, atmospheric river forecasting, coastal flooding and storm surge forecasting, the National Integrated Heat Health Information System, aviation weather and airborne observations, NESDIS commercial partnership and transition planning, AWIPS transition strategy, National Weather Service workforce reports and hiring-freeze protections, artificial intelligence for weather forecasting, atmospheric composition observations, and coastal marine fog forecasts. It expands commercial weather data programs, commercial data pilot work, contracting authority, data assimilation and metadata standards, hazardous-weather risk communication, hazard communication research, NOAA Weather Radio, flash-flood warning standards, post-storm surveys, GAO alert dissemination reports, social and behavioral data collection, weather information for agriculture and water management, drought information, National Mesonet, soil moisture monitoring, the National Water Center, harmful algal bloom and hypoxia research, NOAA and EPA algal bloom activities, national observing networks, a national incubator program, fire weather services, fire weather testbeds, incident meteorologist service, fire weather workforce reports, fire science and technology planning, fire weather rating systems, landslide preparedness, the USGS Next Generation Water Observing System, national groundwater monitoring, seafood country-of-origin methodology, illegal fishing enforcement technical assistance, cybersecurity and telecommunications planning for the U.S. Academic Research Fleet, National Weather Service relocation allowances, unfunded priorities lists, and Pacific island weather authorities.
Who Benefits and How
Emergency managers benefit from more accurate forecasts, NOAA Weather Radio, flash flood warning standards, post-storm surveys, and better hazardous-weather risk communication. National Weather Service offices benefit from workforce planning, hiring-freeze protections, relocation allowances, AWIPS transition planning, incident meteorologist service, and fire-weather support. Weather industry companies benefit from commercial data programs, pilot programs, contracting authority, metadata standards, and collaboration in precipitation, atmospheric river, storm surge, and hazard communication work. Academic weather researchers benefit from research planning, testbeds, social science data authority, harmful algal bloom incubators, fire science working groups, and transition of research into operations. Farmers and water managers benefit from weather information for agriculture, drought information, soil moisture monitoring, National Mesonet observations, National Water Center work, and next-generation water observing. Coastal communities benefit from coastal flooding, storm surge, fog, harmful algal bloom, hypoxia, ocean observation, and seafood-origin provisions. Fire weather responders benefit from a coordinated fire weather services program, fire weather testbed, incident meteorologist service, emergency response pay provisions, and fire weather rating systems. Commercial weather data providers and satellite data providers benefit from NOAA partnership, transition, and commercial data purchase pathways.
Who Bears the Burden and How
NOAA must manage a large set of new or reauthorized programs, plans, reports, data standards, partnerships, and public-safety duties. National Weather Service managers must handle workforce reports, relocation allowances, AWIPS transition, weather radio, incident meteorologists, fire-weather services, and hiring-freeze protections. NESDIS program offices must manage satellite partnership, commercial transition, and operational planning duties. EPA must carry out freshwater harmful algal bloom and hypoxia research and coordination responsibilities. USGS must establish and support next-generation water observing and groundwater monitoring work. NSF and Academic Research Fleet operators must plan cybersecurity and telecommunications improvements for oceanographic research vessels. Federal agencies cooperating on weather, water, fire, drought, and ocean programs must coordinate to avoid duplication and support NOAA-led implementation. Federal taxpayers bear the authorized costs, including specific fire-weather and related program authorizations.
Key Provisions
- Reauthorizes and expands NOAA weather research, forecasting, public-safety, and research-to-operations priorities.
- Establishes or expands numerical weather prediction, Radar Next, data void, atmospheric river, coastal flooding, heat health, aviation weather, satellite partnership, AWIPS, and AI forecasting programs.
- Requires National Weather Service workforce reports, hiring protections, relocation allowances, incident meteorologist service, and weather radio modernization.
- Expands commercial weather data, contracting, data assimilation, metadata standards, hazardous-weather communication, post-storm surveys, and GAO alert-dissemination review.
- Provides agriculture, water management, drought, mesonet, soil moisture, National Water Center, next-generation water observing, and groundwater monitoring authorities.
- Requires harmful algal bloom, hypoxia, ocean observing, incubator, seafood-origin, illegal fishing, and Academic Research Fleet cybersecurity work.
- Establishes fire weather services, fire weather testbeds, fire science planning, fire weather rating systems, emergency response provisions, and annual workforce submissions.
- Requires agency cooperation, nonduplication safeguards, unfunded priorities reporting, and specific authorization amounts for covered programs.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Reauthorizes and expands federal weather, water, fire, satellite, commercial data, hazardous-weather communication, drought, algal bloom, landslide, academic fleet, seafood-origin, and NOAA workforce programs to improve forecasting, observations, warnings, research transition, and public safety.
Key Policy Areas
Weather, Science, Emergency Management, Agriculture, Oceans
Primary Purpose
Reauthorizes and expands federal weather, water, fire, satellite, commercial data, hazardous-weather communication, drought, algal bloom, landslide, academic fleet, seafood-origin, and NOAA workforce programs to improve forecasting, observations, warnings, research transition, and public safety.
Policy Domains
Bill provisions
Identified Gains
- Emergency managers
- National Weather Service offices
- Weather industry companies
- Academic weather researchers
- Farmers
- Water managers
- Coastal communities
- Fire weather responders
- Commercial weather data providers
- Satellite data providers
Identified Costs
- NOAA
- National Weather Service managers
- NESDIS program offices
- EPA
- USGS
- NSF
- Academic Research Fleet operators
- Federal weather agencies
- Federal taxpayers
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
ReportedCommittee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Ordered to be reported …
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, …
Introduced in Senate
Mr. Cruz (for himself, Ms. Cantwell, Mr. Sullivan, Ms. Blunt …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
EPA, NESDIS program offices, NOAA
Positive-direction: National Weather Service offices
Negative-direction: EPA, NESDIS program offices, NOAA, NSF, National Weather Service managers, USGS
Emergency managers, Fire weather responders
Commercial weather data providers, Weather industry companies
Academic Research Fleet operators, Academic weather researchers
Positive-direction: Academic weather researchers
Negative-direction: Academic Research Fleet operators
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "administrator"
- → NOAA Administrator
- "under_secretary"
- → Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology