Alaska Awaits 100+ New Weather Stations Amid Aviation Safety Push
JUNEAU — Alaska's skies, vital for transporting people and goods to remote communities, are set for a major upgrade with more than 160 new weather stations funded by federal dollars last year. The initiative targets the state's high rate of fatal plane crashes, where unreliable weather data has long hindered safe flying. Local aviation experts anticipate some stations activating as early as this summer or fall, though the Federal Aviation Administration has not disclosed precise sites.
The $120 million infusion, part of the federal budget reconciliation bill signed by President Trump last month and supplemented by an April FAA announcement, will support 174 weather observer systems alongside telecommunication enhancements. In the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, public notices from the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities signal new stations at Tuntutuliak Airport, which currently lacks one, and upgrades elsewhere. Similar plans hint at Ouzinkie in the Kodiak Archipelago, False Pass and Akutan in the Aleutians, and Willow in Southcentral Alaska — all leases filed recently.
Cohl Pope, FAA Weather Camera Program manager, explained that about 64 weather cameras will join the stations by late 2028, but locations shift and thus stay undisclosed to avoid confusion. This opacity frustrates pilots reliant on real-time data for bush flights serving Alaska's far-flung villages. With installations ramping up, the upgrades promise to transform aviation safety across the Last Frontier's rugged terrain.
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