Japan Meteorological Agency
KishÅ-chÅ (気象åº) | |
JMA logo | |
![]() JMA headquarters building in Tokyo | |
Agency overview | |
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Formed | July 1, 1956 |
Preceding agencies |
|
Jurisdiction | Government of Japan |
Headquarters |
1-3-4 Ōtemachi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 35°41′22.5″N 139°45′42.1″E / 35.689583°N 139.761694°ECoordinates: 35°41′22.5″N 139°45′42.1″E / 35.689583°N 139.761694°E |
Employees | 5,539 (2010)[1] |
Annual budget |
¥62.0 billion (2010-11)[2] ¥59.0 billion (2011-12)[3] ¥58.9 billion (est. 2012)[3] |
Agency executives |
|
Parent agency | Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism |
Website |
www |
The Japan Meteorological Agency (æ°—è±¡åº KishÅ-chÅ), frequently abbreviated to JMA, is an agency of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.[4] It is charged with gathering and providing results for the public in Japan, that are obtained from data based on daily scientific observation and research into natural phenomena in the fields of meteorology, hydrology, seismology and volcanology, among other related scientific fields. Its headquarters is located in Chiyoda, Tokyo.
JMA is primarily responsible for the nationwide issuance of earthquake warnings of the Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) system. JMA is also designated one of the Regional Specialized Meteorological Centers of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). It has the responsibility of forecasting, naming, and the distribution of warnings for tropical cyclones in the Northwestern Pacific region, including the Celebes Sea, the Sulu Sea, the South China Sea, the East China Sea, the Yellow Sea, the Sea of Japan and the Sea of Okhotsk.
History
- August 26, 1872 - The first weather station in Japan set up in Hakodate, Hokkaido. That is the precursor of the present Hakodate Weather Station (å‡½é¤¨æµ·æ´‹æ°—è±¡å° Hakodate KaiyÅ KishÅ-dai).[1]
- June 1875 - The original Tokyo Meteorological Observatory (æ±äº¬æ°—è±¡å° TÅkyÅ KishÅ-dai) was formed within the Survey Division of Geography Bureau of Home Ministry (内務çœåœ°ç†å¯®é‡åœ°èª² Naimu-shÅ Chiri-ryÅ RyÅchi-ka).[1][5]
- January 1, 1887 - The Tokyo Meteorological Observatory was renamed as the Central Meteorological Observatory (ä¸å¤®æ°—è±¡å° ChÅ«Å KishÅ-dai), with the transfer of its jurisdiction to the Home Ministry.
- April 1895 - The Ministry of Education (æ–‡éƒ¨çœ MonbushÅ) replaced the preceding ministry as an administrator of the Observatory.
- January 1, 1923 - The main office moved to Motoe-machi, KÅjimachi-ku (later Takehira-chÅ 1), where is near a moat surrounding the Imperial Palace.[6]
- November 1943 - The Ministry of Transport and Communications (é‹è¼¸é€šä¿¡çœ Un'yu TÅ«shin-shÅ) took over the CMO's operation.
- May 1945 - It got to be a part of the Ministry of Transport (é‹è¼¸çœ Un'yu-shÅ).
- July 1, 1956 - The Central Meteorological Observatory became an agency of the Ministry of Transport, and has been renamed to the Japan Meteorological Agency (æ°—è±¡åº KishÅ-chÅ).
- March 1964 - The headquarters office was relocated to the present building in ÅŒtemachi, Chiyoda-ku.
- January 6, 2001 - The JMA has become an agency of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (å›½åœŸäº¤é€šçœ Kokudo-kÅtsÅ«-shÅ) with the Japanese government reformation.
- 2013 - It has been announced that it would be scheduled to move the headquarters into Toranomon, Minato-ku.[6]
Services
Overview
The JMA is responsible not only for gathering and reporting weather data and forecasts in Japan, but also for observation and warning of earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions.[7]
The agency has six regional administrative offices (including five DMOs and Okinawa Meteorological Observatory), four Marine Observatories, five auxiliary facilities, four Aviation Weather Service Centers and 47 local offices composed of the LMOs. These are also used to gather data, supplemented by weather satellites such as Himawari, and other research institutes.[7]
In 1968, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) designated the JMA as a Regional Specialized Meteorological Centre (RSMC) for Asia.[8] In June 1988, the WMO also assigned the JMA as a RSMC for the Northwestern Pacific under its Tropical Cyclone programme.[8] In July 1989, the RSMC Tokyo - Typhoon Center was established within the headquarters office, which dealt with the forecasting and dissemination of active tropical cyclones, as well as preparing a summary of each year's cyclone activity.[9]
Observation and forecast
Weather
Land weather
Each DMO and LMO issues weather forecasts and warnings or advisories to the general public live in its own area. Weather data used to these forecasts are acquired from the Surface Observation (represented by the AMeDAS), the Radar Observation, the Upper-air Observation and the Satellite Observation mainly using the Himawari series.
Marine weather
The Marine Observatories are seated in Hakodate, Maizuru, Kobe and Nagasaki. These stations observe ocean waves, tide levels, sea surface temperature and ocean current etc. in the Northwestern Pacific basin, as well as the Sea of Japan and the Sea of Okhotsk basin, and provide marine meteorological forecasts resulted from them, in cooperation with the Hydrographic and Oceanographic Department, Japan Coast Guard.
Aviation weather
In 2005, in accordance with the ICAO's new CNS/ATM system, the Civil Aviation Bureau of the MLIT Japan set up the Air Traffic Management Center (ATMC) in Fukuoka, where the Fukuoka FIR is fixed. Along with this establishment, the JMA placed the Air Traffic Meteorology Center (ATMetC) inside the ATMC.
The agency forecasts SIGMET for aircraft in flight within the Fukuoka FIR airspace, while VOLMET is broadcast by each Aviation Weather Service Centers at the airports of Haneda, Narita, Centrair and Kansai. Additionally, Aviation Weather Stations (beside the airports of New Chitose, Sendai, Osaka, Fukuoka, Kagoshima and Naha) deal with the similar tasks as these.
Tropical cyclones
In the Northwestern Pacific area, the typhoon season ordinarily comes almost from May to November. The JMA forecasts and warns or advises on tropical cyclones to the public in Japan and its surrounding countries as well because it also works as the RSMC Tokyo - Typhoon Center.[10]
Earthquakes
The JMA has its own 624 observation stations across the country[11] that set up at intervals of 20 km approximately[12] in order to measure seismic intensity of earthquakes precisely. The agency also utilize about 2,900 more seismographs[11] owned by the National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention (NIED) and local governments. A 24-hour office has been housed within the JMA headquarters in Tokyo, for monitoring and tracking seismic events in the vicinity of Japan to collect and process their data, which issues observed earthquake's information on its hypocenter, magnitude, seismic intensity and possibility of tsunami occurrence after quakes quickly to the public through the Earthquake Phenomena Observation System (EPOS).[13] The Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) system began to work fully for the general public on October 1, 2007.
The agency is one of the representatives on the national Coordinating Committee for Earthquake Prediction.[14]
Tsunamis
It is essential to provide coastal regions for tsunami information so that its catastrophic damages can be reduced and mitigated there. In case of there is a possibility of tsunami after the earthquake, the JMA issues Tsunami Warning or Advisory for each region in Japan that contain estimated tsunami heights and arrival times within around 2 – 3 minutes of the quake.
Volcanos
The agency set up four Volcanic Observations and Information Centers within DMOs in Sapporo, Sendai, Tokyo and Fukuoka. They are monitoring volcanic events on 110 active volcanos in Japan and 47 of these volcanos selected by the Coordinating Committee for Prediction of Volcanic Eruption are under the 24-hour observation with seismographs, GPS, air-shock recorders, fixed point observation cameras and so on. If it is predicted a volcanic eruption affects inhabited areas or around a crater, Volcanic Warning should be issued and supplemented by Volcanic Alert Levels.
Organization
Headquarters
- JMA Headquarters (気象åºæœ¬åº KishÅ-chÅ HonchÅ)
- Director-General (長官 ChÅkan)
- Deputy Director-General (次長 JichÅ)
- Administration Department (ç·å‹™éƒ¨ Soumu-bu)
- Forecast Department (äºˆå ±éƒ¨ YohÅ-bu)
- Observations Department (観測部 Kansoku-bu)
- Seismological and Volcanological Department (地震ç«å±±éƒ¨ Jishin-kazan-bu)
- Global Environment and Marine Department (地çƒç’°å¢ƒãƒ»æµ·æ´‹éƒ¨ ChikyÅ«-kankyÅ/KaiyÅ-bu)
Local offices
- Local Offices (地方支分部局 ChihŠShibun Bukyoku)
- 5 District Meteorological Observatories (ç®¡åŒºæ°—è±¡å° Kanku KishÅ-dai)
- Okinawa Meteorological Observatory (æ²–ç¸„æ°—è±¡å° Okinawa KishÅ-dai)
- 47 Local Meteorological Observatories (åœ°æ–¹æ°—è±¡å° ChihÅ KishÅ-dai)
- 2 Weather Stations (測候所 SokkÅjo)
- 4 Aviation Weather Service Centers (èˆªç©ºåœ°æ–¹æ°—è±¡å° KÅkÅ« ChihÅ KisyÅ-dai)
- 6 Aviation Weather Stations (航空測候所 KÅkÅ« SokkÅjo)
- 47 Local Meteorological Observatories (åœ°æ–¹æ°—è±¡å° ChihÅ KishÅ-dai)
Auxiliary organs
- Auxiliary Organs (æ–½è¨ç‰æ©Ÿé–¢ Shisetsu-tÅ Kikan)
- Meteorological Research Institute (æ°—è±¡ç ”ç©¶æ‰€ KishÅ KenkyÅ«jo)
- Meteorological Satellite Center (気象衛星センター KishÅ-eisei SentÄ)
- Aerological Observatory (é«˜å±¤æ°—è±¡å° KÅsÅ KishÅ-dai)
- Magnetic Observatory (地ç£æ°—観測所 Chijiki Kansokujo)
- Meteorological College (気象大å¦æ ¡ KishÅ DaigakkÅ)
Director-Generals and Chief Executives
Chief Executives of Central Meteorological Observatory
- Arai Ikunosuke (è’井 éƒä¹‹åŠ©): 1890-1891
- Kobayashi Kazutomo (å°æž— 一知): 1891-1895
- Nakamura Kiyoo (ä¸æ‘ 精男): 1895-1923
- Okada Takematsu (岡田 æ¦æ¾): 1923-1941
- Fujiwhara Sakuhei (藤原 咲平): 1941-1947
- Wadachi Kiyoo (å’Œé” æ¸…å¤«): 1947-1956
Director-Generals of JMA
- Wadachi Kiyoo (å’Œé” æ¸…å¤«): 1956-1963
- Hatakeyama Hisanao (ç• å±± ä¹…å°š): 1963-1965
- Shibata Yoshiji (柴田 淑次): 1965-1969
- Yoshitake Motoji (å‰æ¦ ç´ äºŒ): 1969-1971
- Takahashi KoūchirŠ(高橋 浩一郎): 1971-1974
- Mouri KeitarÅ (毛利 åœå¤ªéƒŽ): 1974-1976
- Arizumi Naosuke (æœ‰ä½ ç›´ä»‹): 1976-1978
- Kubota Masaya (窪田 æ£å…«): 1978-1980
- Masuzawa JÅtarÅ (増澤 è²å¤ªéƒŽ): 1980-1983
- Suehiro Shigeji (末廣 é‡äºŒ): 1983-1985
- Uchida Eiji (内田 英治): 1985-1987
- Kikuchi Yukio (èŠåœ° 幸雄): 1987-1990
- Tatehira RyÅzÅ (ç«‹å¹³ 良三): 1990-1992
- Nitta Takashi (æ–°ç”° å°š): 1992-1993
- Ninomiya KÅzÅ (二宮 洸三): 1993-1996
- Ono Toshiyuki (å°é‡Ž ä¿Šè¡Œ): 1996-1998
- (ç€§å· é›„å£®): 1998-2000
- Yamamoto KÅji (山本 å二): 2000-2003
- Kitade Takeo (北出 æ¦å¤«): 2003-2004
- Nagasaka KÅichi (é•·å‚ æ˜´ä¸€): 2004-2006
- Hiraki Satoshi (平木 哲): 2006-2009
- Sakurai Kunio (櫻井 邦雄): 2009-2011
- Hatori Mitsuhiko (羽鳥 光彦): 2011–present
See also
References
- 1 2 3 ç·åˆãƒ‘ンフレット「気象åºã€ (PDF) (in Japanese). Japan Meteorological Agency. January 2011. Retrieved 2012-04-01.
- ↑ å¹³æˆ23年度 気象åºé–¢ä¿‚äºˆç®—æ±ºå®šæ¦‚è¦ (PDF) (in Japanese). Japan Meteorological Agency. 2010-12-24. Retrieved 2012-04-01.
- 1 2 å¹³æˆ24年度 気象åºé–¢ä¿‚äºˆç®—æ±ºå®šæ¦‚è¦ (PDF) (in Japanese). Japan Meteorological Agency. 2011-12-24. Retrieved 2012-04-01.
- ↑ "国土交通çœè¨ç½®æ³• (e-Gov)" (in Japanese). ç·å‹™çœ. Retrieved March 31, 2012.
- ↑ Kan'ichi Koinuma (March 1969). 内務çœã«ãŠã‘る気象観測ã®é–‹å§‹ã®çµŒç·¯ã¨æ°—象å°ã®å称 (PDF) (in Japanese). Meteorological Society of Japan. Retrieved 2012-03-30.
- 1 2 気象åºåºèˆŽç§»è»¢å¾Œã®æ–°ã—ã„éœ²å ´ã‚’é¸å®š (PDF) (in Japanese). Japan Meteorological Agency. September 2008. Retrieved 2012-03-30.
- 1 2 "Japan Meteorological Agency: The national meteorological service of Japan" (PDF). Japan Meteorological Agency. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
- 1 2 "Cooperation through WMO and Other Multilateral Activities". Japan Meteorological Agency. Retrieved 2012-04-03.
- ↑ Japan Meteorological Organization (February 2001). "Annual Report on Activities of the RSMC Tokyo - Typhoon Center 2000" (PDF). Retrieved 2011-11-21.
- ↑ RSMC Tokyo - Typhoon Center
- 1 2 "Table of Observation Stations" (PDF). The Headquarters for Earthquake Research Promotion (of Japan). September 2011. Retrieved 2012-04-02.
- ↑ Jochen Zschau; Andreas N. Küppers, eds. (2002-11-18). Early Warning Systems for Natural Disaster Reduction. Springer. p. 449. ISBN 9783540679622. Retrieved 2012-04-02.
- ↑ Corkill, Edan (2011-04-10). "Japan's seismic nerve center". Japan Times. p. 7. Retrieved 2012-03-31.
- ↑ "Organizations with ties to CCEP". CCEP. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
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