. Earth Science News .
New Weather Index Is Launched To Hedge Risk

In the European heatwave of 2003, sales of icecream and beer surged but purchases of chocolate plummeted. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) May 10, 2007
France's national weather service and the market Euronext launched a scheme on Thursday aimed at helping companies anticipate risks from abrupt changes in the weather. Metnext, a joint venture of Meteo-France and the subsidiary of NYSE Euronext, aims at giving "customised indices" to individual firms that will advise them about upcoming weather risk.

The garment industry, makers of soft drinks and ice-cream, farmers and energy producers are just a few of the sectors that can be badly affected by sharp changes in temperature and rainfall.

In industrialised countries, between 20 and 30 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) are exposed to adverse weather, and the proportion rises to 70-80 percent if indirect effects are taken into account, said Meteo-France.

In September 2006, an exceptionally hot month, 82 percent of consumer purchases were linked to weather factors, it said.

In the European heatwave of 2003, sales of icecream and beer surged but purchases of chocolate plummeted.

Meteo-France holds a 65 percent stake in Metnext and Euronext the remaining 35 percent.

Metnext's customised indices will be based on historical data such as temperature, rainfall, direction and speed of wind, to compile forecasts for periods ranging from a few days to several weeks or months, depending on the company's needs.

In April, the bank UBS launched "global warming index" based on weather futures for 15 US cities, a data net that will be expanded to other cities around the world.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Email This Article

Related Links
NYSE Euronext
The Economy

May Day Protest Sparks Rare Clashes In Macau
Macau (AFP) May 01, 2007
May Day protesters clashed with riot police in Macau as a rally against labour shortages turned violent Tuesday, sparking rare scenes of civil unrest in the southern Chinese territory. Police fired blank rounds into the air and used dogs to disperse a crowd of around 1,000 protesters after they broke through cordons lining the route of the march. Cheered by onlookers, they marched towards government offices downtown only to be penned back at a nearby fish market.







  • Bridges Will Rock Safely During Quakes With New Design
  • Faster And Better Emergency Response Through Satellite Telecoms
  • White House Denies Iraq War Hampers Home Rescue Efforts
  • US Control Strategies May Make Flu Epidemics Worse

  • New NASA Study Points To Extreme Summer Warming In The Future
  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions In EU-15 Slip
  • Is Climate Change Likely To Increase Disease In Corals
  • Melting Of The Greenland Ice Cap May Have Consequences For Climatic Change

  • Transcontinental Wildfire Emissions Monitored From Space
  • Volcanic Eruptions In Kamchatka
  • NASA Satellite Captures Image Of Georgia Wildfires
  • US Earth-Observing Satellites In Jeopardy

  • Denmark Banks On Offshore Wind Power For Clean Future
  • Coal-Fired Power Stations Dominate Europe's Dirty Thirty
  • Warsaw Energy Summit's Bleak Prospects
  • Self-Sufficient Danish Island Leads The Way In Clean Energy

  • Advances In HIV And TB Vaccines
  • Churning Sea Spurs Rethink Over Global-Warming Models
  • Experts Warn On Gambia AIDS Cure
  • HIV Treatment Goal Elusive

  • Pretoria Development Forces Out Vervet Monkeys
  • An Ancient Bathtub Ring Of Mammoth Fossils
  • Climate Change Impacts Stream Life
  • Wildlife Caught In Web Of Internet Sales

  • Carbon Monoxide Pollution Over Australia Came From South America
  • With Dump Full, Thousands Of Tonnes Of Trash Fill Naples Streets
  • Indonesia Prosecutors Challenge Newmont Verdict
  • Tree Rings Show Elevated Tungsten Coincides With Nevada Leukemia Cluster

  • Gene Mutation Linked To Cognition Is Found Only In Humans
  • Climate Changes Caused Neanderthal Extinction On The Iberian Peninsula
  • Sleep And Exercise Critical To A Smarter And Longer Life
  • Ape Gestures Offer Clues To The Evolution Of Human Communication

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement