Ocean Sensors Shut Down Early, Losing Key Climate Data
United States, USAFri Jun 12 2026
The U. S. science agency began pulling out a major ocean monitoring network before its planned 25‑year life ended. The decision was announced in 2025 and will remove most of the arrays by summer 2027. Scientists say this cut short a system that has been gathering continuous data from the ocean surface to the deep sea. The loss means fewer records of rising temperatures, storm patterns and fish movements.
The network was built in 2016 with a budget of more than $360 million. It included seven arrays that stretched across remote parts of the Atlantic and Pacific. Each array houses hundreds of instruments measuring temperature, salinity, oxygen, currents and more. The data feeds scientists, governments and industry with insights into marine heat waves, hurricane formation and the health of fisheries.
The agency’s stated reason is a shift to a “more nimble” approach and new priorities. However, the National Academies of Sciences and several researchers argue that the decision ignores their 2025 report, which urged continued support for core ocean infrastructure. Critics say the move reflects political pressure to cut climate‑related programs.
If the arrays are removed, the real‑time monitoring of deep ocean conditions will stop. The only remaining system is a small cable that watches seismic activity near the Pacific Northwest. Researchers warn this will leave coastal communities, fishery businesses and national security without critical data on the Atlantic Overturning Circulation, a key driver of global weather.
The agency says that all data collected over the past decade will stay online. Yet without ongoing measurements, future studies cannot validate climate models or track changes in ocean currents that may affect weather and economies worldwide.
https://localnews.ai/article/ocean-sensors-shut-down-early-losing-key-climate-data-5cffa7dd
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