News
EUMETNET celebrates 30 years of European meteorological cooperation
DHMZ, 28 May 2026 - In 2026, EUMETNET marks 30 years of cooperation between European National Meteorological Services. Since 1996, EUMETNET has enabled its members to work together on shared priorities, from strengthening observation networks and improving the quality and accessibility of data, to delivering high-quality weather and climate services and accelerating innovation. This anniversary demonstrates the enduring value of European cooperation by strengthening national capabilities and delivering tangible collective benefits for members and for society.
Originally created to strengthen cooperation and represent the collective interests of European National Meteorological Services, EUMETNET has evolved in step with changing scientific, operational, and policy demands. What began as a voluntary network has grown into a mature and trusted partnership, built on long term commitment, shared objectives, and mutual confidence.
Supporting Members through shared activities
Value beyond borders
Member perspectives
Looking to the future
Anniversary video and brochure
Supporting Members through shared activities
Over the past three decades, EUMETNET has enabled its members to collaborate across a wide range of domains, improving efficiency, consistency, and innovation in meteorology across Europe. Through joint activities, members are able to pool expertise, reduce unnecessary duplication, and benefit from solutions developed collectively.
This cooperative model supports National Meteorological Services in fulfilling their public service missions, whilst also strengthening Europe’s collective capacity to respond to evolving user needs, technological developments, and environmental challenges.
Value beyond borders
Since its launch, EUMETNET has steadily expanded from an initial focus on coordination into a comprehensive framework supporting a broad range of joint activities across European meteorology.
Early collaboration focused on reducing observation gaps in data‑sparse and remote areas, such as the North Atlantic and the Arctic, through ship‑based radiosonde launches and aircraft‑based observations. In parallel, surface station and radar data began to be exchanged to enhance data quality and availability. This initial work led to the establishment of the EUMETNET Composite Observing System, a major milestone in European meteorological cooperation. It demonstrated that working together at the European level could deliver improved observation coverage, higher‑quality data, pan‑European products based on national data, and ultimately more accurate weather forecasts at lower cost.
Building on this success, additional observing capabilities were progressively added, including surface marine observations, measurements of atmospheric conditions at different heights - such as wind, temperature, humidity, and airborne particles - and, more recently, pollen monitoring. At the same time, cooperation expanded beyond observation into weather forecasting, climate services, aviation meteorology, education and training, data policy and availability, and the collective representation of shared interests towards key European and global organisations.
In the forecasting domain, one of EUMETNET’s most visible achievements is MeteoAlarm, a publicly recognisable multi-hazard early warning dissemination system. It aggregates, harmonises across borders, visualises and disseminates weather warnings issued by National Meteorological Services across Europe.
Responding to growing data demands and rapid technological change, EUMETNET has developed MeteoGate as a federated European data-sharing infrastructure, making it easier for members and external users to discover and access meteorological data. In parallel, EUMETNET has launched a wide range of initiatives to harness artificial intelligence and machine learning for weather, climate and environmental applications.
Together, these developments illustrate how EUMETNET has evolved over three decades into a member-driven organisation delivering integrated European capabilities across observations, forecasting, climate services, aviation, data sharing and innovation.
Member perspectives: Croatian Meteorological and Hydrological Service
EUMETNET’s shared achievements are made possible by the dedication and diverse contributions of its members, who engage with the organisation in different yet equally valuable ways. Some take responsibility for delivering joint programmes on behalf of all members, while others contribute their data, knowledge, and expertise for the benefit of the wider community.
The Croatian Meteorological and Hydrological Service (DHMZ) became a full member of EUMETNET by signing the Declaration of Membership in Aberdeen on 12 April 2007, formally strengthening cooperation already established through programmes such as MAP, SRNWP and OPERA.
Over nearly two decades of membership, DHMZ experts have contributed to numerous EUMETNET programmes, including EUCOS, SURFMAR, ECSN, the Climate Programme and AutoPollen, which supports the development of an automatic European network for monitoring pollen and fungal spores.
For the Croatian public, the most visible result of this cooperation is MeteoAlarm, which DHMZ joined in 2009. Since 2016, DHMZ has also published coastal warnings for the Croatian part of the Adriatic on the platform.
DHMZ is particularly active in EUMETCAL, focused on education, training and professional development among EUMETNET members, as highlighted by EUMETNET Executive Director Klemen Bergant during his official visit to DHMZ in June 2023.
DHMZ has also hosted important EUMETNET events, including the Directors’ Meeting in Dubrovnik in 2011, technical meetings in Zagreb in 2025 and the E-AI Spring Workshop 2026.
DHMZ Director-General Ivan Güttler sees future cooperation in artificial intelligence, harmonised warning systems and a coordinated approach towards private service providers.
Looking to the future
As EUMETNET marks its 30th anniversary, the focus is not only on past achievements but also on the challenges ahead. The demands placed on National Meteorological Services continue to evolve, and sustained cooperation remains essential to addressing them effectively.
Building on three decades of shared experience, EUMETNET will continue to support its members by fostering collaboration, encouraging innovation and strengthening the European meteorological community—helping National Meteorological Services remain well equipped to deliver high quality, authoritative information for the benefit of society in the years to come.
Anniversary video and brochure
On the occasion of EUMETNET’s 30th anniversary, an anniversary video and a special brochure have also been prepared, presenting the development, role and shared achievements of European meteorological cooperation.