SVP-B drifter - Photo Gilles Le Goff

For more than 30 years, drifting buoys had been sending their observations ashore thanks to the Argos system, exclusively. Argos data are processed by CLS in Toulouse (France) and in Largo (USA). For many years, data had been sent onto the GTS in FM18 BUOY and FM94 BUFR (never-validated WMO template), in parallel. Since 2008, Iridium Short Burst Data (SBD) has been more and more used for the transmission of drifting buoy data ashore. Today, data from nearly all platforms are transmitted in the expected BUFR template 315009. The transmission of the never-validated BUFR WMO template has ended.

The transition is now mostly complete, with only few centres still producing data on the GTS in FM18 BUOY.

GTS headers for drifting buoy in BUFR format data start with character string 'IOB'.

Warning to data users: Two timestamps are included in each drifing buoy observation message. Each timestamp is preceded by its related time significance (BUFR element 0 08 021). It must be noted  that, in template TM315009, the first timestamp is this of the last known position (value is 26). This of the observation (time significance = 25), also called "nominal reporting time" is in second position. Do not confuse both.

 


Situation as of 12 December 2018 (Météo-France)

All the drifting buoy data transmitted on the GTS are in BUFR 315009, except for messages in FM-18 BUOY still produced from:

  • CWAO: these are duplicate of messages sent in BUFR – so no problem there, as long as users take care of handling duplicates (easily identifiable with the addition of "00" in the middle of the identifier, when going from 5-digits to 7-digits).
  • RJTD: these are duplicate of messages sent in BUFR – but beware the TAC and BUFR identifiers differ! There are however only 3 platforms in this case, at the time of writing.

Survey as of 13 December 2016 (ECMWF)

NOTE: in this map the BUFR is converted to TAC for internal applications. The important bit is that there are now very few platforms not reporting in BUFR.


JMA starts to produce BUFR

See WMO operational newsletter information of 14 November 2016

Situation on 24 October 2016 (Meteo-France)

For 24 October 2016 for the full hour of 00 UTC (till 00:59:59) a count of BUOY reports received from drifting buoys was made (Reminder: Iridium-transmitting buoys are generally set-up to relay exactly one report per hour, whereas Argos-transmitting can relay more than one report per hour). The results are as follows, based on the data received at Météo-France from the GTS:

  • Joubeh (Canada GTS node) produced 110 BUFR reports, 80 TAC.
  • CLS America (USA GTS node) produced 893 BUFR reports, 841 TAC.
  • CLS Toulouse (France GTS node) produced 17 BUFR messages, 11 TAC.
  • Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) and Pacific Gyre (USA GTS node) produced 392 BUFR reports, no TAC.
  • Météo-France (including E-SURFMAR) produced 235 BUFR reports, 157 TAC.
  • Tokyo produced no BUFR reports, 4 TAC. (These are the only known instances of data that have not migrated to BUFR at all yet.)

 Overall, there were 1647 BUFR reports and 1093 TAC.

Using only TAC already amounts to losing about one third of the available drifting buoys data stream.

Worse, this situation only degrades every day that goes by, for the following two reasons:

  1. Most if not all newly deployed buoys use 7-digit WMO identifiers, whereas TAC is limited to 5-digits. Direct WMO identifier remapping is not an option, from a data sound data management point of view (because data pushed on the GTS are picked up by many users, including climate applications, and this requires good traceability)
  2. All new deployments by the NOAA's Global Drifter Program see the data processed by SIO, in BUFR only, even if several of the buoys encode their use 5-digit identifiers (only 10% of the drifters presently could be encoded in TAC without problem of conversion from 7- to 5-digits).

Drifting buoys - Survey on August 6th, 2016 (Meteo-France)

The table here above shows the number of drifting buoys for which the observations were received by Meteo-France on the 6th of August. Figures are shared by the WMO code which was used: either FM18 BUOY, FM94 BUFR with template TM315009 or the never validated template for data buoys. This table also shows the number of observations which were received. One may see that more buoys now report in BUFR with template TM315009 than in FM18 BUOY code or BUFR with the old template.Only one buoy (CCCC=CWAO) is still reporting in "FM18 only". JMA remains the only NMS that did not migrate its BUFR production to the new template. Six buoys are only concerned. With these exceptions, one may say that 99.5% of the drifting buoys report in BUFR with template TM315009 (against 83% buoys that still report in FM18). With regards to the data volume, the difference is even higher: only 65% of drifting buoy observations are sent in FM18.   

 

Buoy BUFR data - Survey on end of June 2016 (ECMWF)

This map shows the data buoys (moored and drifting) that reported in FM18 and BUFR (91% in all), in FM18 only (2%) and in BUFR only (7%) between the 13th and the 29th of June 2016 (according to data received at ECMWF). That means that 98% of buoy data are henceforth sent in BUFR. The buoys reporting in FM18 only were mainly Indian moored buoys (DEMS) and Japanese drifting buoys (RJTD). During the coming months, more and more data will be sent in BUFR only (pink dots). Met Office asked to prolong the date of end for FM18 messages to the 1st of November 2016 but this code format does not allow to report observations of buoys having a 7-digit WMO ID not convertible in a 5-digit form.

Warning: Moored buoys reporting in FM13 and/or in BUFR with ship template (TM308009) does not appear on this map.

 

Buoy BUFR data - Survey on May 16th, 2016 (ECMWF)

This map shows the data buoys (moored and drifting) that reported in FM18 and BUFR (92% in all), in FM18 only (2%) and in BUFR only (6%) on the 16th of May 2016 (according to data received at ECMWF). That means that 98% of buoy data are henceforth sent in BUFR. The buoys reporting in FM18 only were mainly Indian moored buoys (DEMS) and Japanese drifting buoys (RJTD). During the coming months, more and more data will be sent in BUFR only (pink dots). It must be noted that most of the FM18 data should disappear from the GTS on the 1st of September 2016.

Moored buoys reporting in FM13 and/or in BUFR with ship template (TM308009) does not appear on this map.

Drifting buoy BUFR data - Survey on April 27th, 2016 (Meteo-France & MEDS)

(Data received and processed at Meteo-France and/or MEDS)


 

Drifting buoy BUFR data - Survey on October 12th, 2014 (Meteo-France)

(Data received and processed at Meteo-France)

CCCCData ProdiderFM94-BUFRTemplateFM18 BUOY onlyFM13 SHIP onlyRemark
CWAOJoubeh3Buoy (not validated)890BUFR or FM18
KARSCLS America1066Buoy (not validated)00 
KWBCPacific Gyre22Buoy (not validated)00BUFR only
KWNBNDBC0 11 
LFPWMeteo-France252Buoy (not validated)00 
LFVWCLS Toulouse15Buoy (not validated)00 
RJTDJMA6Buoy (not validated)00 
 Total1364 9011455 buoys in all

Observations sent in BUFR are also sent in FM18-BUOY code in parallel, excepted those of KWBC