NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP. Track everything from tides and alerts to solar wind and climate history.
NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence provides 36 tools spanning every facet of Earth science. It pulls together immediate weather forecasts, severe storm alerts, aviation reports (METAR/TAF), precise marine tide predictions, and decades of historical climate records. Plus, it tracks space weather from solar wind activity to the aurora forecast—all sourced directly from five official NOAA APIs.
Give Claude and any AI agent real-world access
Filter active warnings by US state, zone ID, or specific event type like a Tornado Warning.
Retrieve yearly summaries, monthly averages, and the 30-year baseline data needed to calculate climate change metrics.
Predict high and low tides, measure water temperature, and track ocean currents at specific coastal stations.
Fetch current airport weather reports (METAR) or future flight forecasts (TAF) using ICAO codes.
Check the Kp index, solar wind speed, and Dst index to predict chances of auroras and geomagnetic storms.
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What AI agents can do with NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence: 36 Tools
Use these specialized tools to fetch everything from real-time airport weather reports (METAR) to long-term climate trends and geomagnetic forecasts.
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Add this MCP to Claude, Cursor, or Windsurf and your AI stops guessing. It gets real tools to look things up, take action, and handle the stuff you keep doing by hand.
Start using NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCPGet Active Alerts
Retrieves all current weather alerts by US state, severity level, or specific event type.
Get Alerts By Zone
Checks for active weather warnings targeting a precise NWS zone ID for focused...
Get Alerts By Point
Finds and reports on current alerts using specific US latitude and longitude...
Get Alert Types
Lists all available weather event types so you know which filters to use when...
Get Metar
Gets the current, detailed airport weather report for any global location using its...
Get Taf
Provides a forecasted set of conditions—including wind and visibility—for an airport over time by ICAO code.
Get Pirep
Retrieves pilot reports detailing unusual weather, icing, or turbulence encountered in the air.
Get Sigmet
Lists significant areas of severe aviation hazards like intense turbulence or IFR...
Get Aviation Station
Fetches basic operational information about a specific airport weather station using...
Get Daily Data
Accesses the largest archive of daily records, providing temperature and...
Get Monthly Summary
Provides aggregated monthly data including average temperatures and total heating...
Get Yearly Summary
Generates annual averages and extreme values, ideal for long-term climate record comparison.
Get Climate Normals
Retrieves the 30-year statistical baseline that defines what 'normal' weather looks like at a location.
Search Stations
Finds NWS station IDs and names near a specific geographical area or keyword search.
Get Forecast
Delivers the 7-day weather forecast for any US location using its latitude and...
Get Hourly Forecast
Provides detailed hour-by-hour forecasts, including wind and humidity, for a US...
Get Forecast Discussion
Reads the Area Forecast Discussion (AFD) to understand the forecaster's full context...
Get Grid Data
Extracts raw, array-based NWS grid data for programmatic analysis of temperature or precipitation fields (US only).
Get Point Metadata
Retrieves technical metadata about a US location, including its responsible weather office and zone coordinates.
Get Water Levels
Gets the observed water level (tides) at a specific US coastal station using a...
Get Tide Predictions
Calculates future high and low tide times and heights for boating or fishing...
Get Currents
Measures the observed speed and direction of ocean currents at select deep-water...
Get Water Temperature
Provides the current water temperature reading for marine biology or recreational...
Get Meteorological
Gathers air temperature, pressure, and wind data to complement tidal readings for a full coastal picture.
Get Sea Level Trends
Tracks long-term relative sea level changes at a US station using decades of historical tide gauge data.
Get Stations
Locates and lists nearby NWS weather observation stations by providing...
Get Latest Observation
Pulls the most recent, raw weather conditions from a specific NWS station ID like...
Get Observation History
Retrieves a timeline of recent observations to track how temperature and wind have...
Get Station Metadata
Provides technical details about an NWS station, including its geographic location...
Get Radar Stations
Lists all active NWS radar stations and their current operational status.
Get Planetary K Index
Reports the NOAA Planetary K-index, which measures geomagnetic activity levels for aurora prediction.
Get K Index Forecast
Predicts the geomagnetic activity level over a three-day window to plan for space...
Get Solar Wind
Gathers real-time data on solar wind speed and magnetic field strength, indicators...
Get Aurora Forecast
Calculates the probability map for visible auroras based on current solar wind...
Get Solar Flux
Provides the 10.7cm radio flux index, which acts as a proxy for overall solar...
Get Dst Index
Measures the current intensity of Earth's magnetic field disturbance (Dst Index) to warn about severe geomagnetic storms.
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Sifting through disconnected environmental reports is exhausting.
Today, getting a complete picture requires clicking between three or four separate portals: one for weather forecasts, another for tide charts, and maybe a third dedicated to space activity. You copy coordinates from the forecast site into the marine site, then you manually cross-reference that data with a separate page showing current Kp index values. It's slow, it’s error-prone, and it takes hours just to compile one comprehensive briefing.
With this MCP, your agent handles all those handoffs automatically. You simply ask for the 'full picture.' The system runs get_forecast, gets_water_levels, checks active alerts, and pulls in the Kp index forecast—all before you finish reading the prompt. It gives you one single, unified answer.
The NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP delivers comprehensive data streams.
Manual checks on tide predictions and observed water levels are now unnecessary. Instead of opening two different browser tabs, you ask for the 'coastal briefing.' The system instantly uses get_tide_predictions alongside get_currents to give you a single read on boating safety.
What's different is that you move from compiling reports to asking questions. You aren’t just looking at data; you’re getting integrated, actionable intelligence across every physical domain.
What NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP does for your AI
Need a complete picture of the environment? This MCP connects your agent to 36 data tools covering everything from day-to-day forecasts to global climate trends and even deep space phenomena. Whether you're tracking water levels for coastal development, predicting severe weather alerts across a state, or modeling long-term sea level rise, this connection handles it.
You don't have to jump between multiple government websites or use separate services; all the data lives here. For example, an agent can check current airport conditions using METARs and then instantly pull up predicted tides for that location. If you're building a complex environmental model, Vinkius hosts this MCP right alongside thousands of others, making it easy to connect multiple sources into one unified intelligence layer.
You simply ask your agent what you need—a 7-day forecast combined with the Kp index forecast—and it delivers everything in one pass.
019d75de-c57a-70e5-b07d-329118101ff7 How to set up NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP
The bottom line is that this MCP acts as a single dashboard for every major environmental system on Earth.
You specify what you need: for example, 'I need a full report on Miami.'
Your AI client uses the MCP to simultaneously query multiple specialized tools—like getting the 7-day forecast, checking current water levels, and retrieving active alerts.
The agent compiles all data points into one cohesive briefing, giving you actionable intelligence across meteorology, marine science, and space weather.
Who uses NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP
Anyone whose job depends on knowing what the environment will do—from maritime operations to infrastructure planning. This means coastal engineers, commercial pilots, climate researchers, and disaster response coordinators.
Determines ideal construction sites by comparing historical sea level rise trends with current tide predictions and water temperature data.
Prepares pre-flight briefings by cross-referencing the latest METAR reports, TAF forecasts, and active SIGMETs for multiple global airports.
Runs long-term analyses by comparing monthly climate summaries against 30-year historical normals to calculate regional deviation.
Benefits of connecting NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP
Immediate situational awareness: Get current conditions, active warnings (get_active_alerts), and detailed airport reports (get_metar) in one query, saving time compared to checking multiple government sites.
Long-term planning accuracy: Instead of relying on a single forecast, you can calculate risk by comparing the get_monthly_summary data against the 30-year baseline from get_climate_normals.
Marine and coastal intelligence: You don't have to guess. Get predicted tides (get_tide_predictions), current speeds (get_currents), and water temperature readings instantly for operational decisions.
Space weather forecasting: Plan for high-stakes operations by checking the Kp index, solar wind data (get_solar_wind), and Dst index to know if an aurora or geomagnetic storm is coming.
Comprehensive coverage: If it involves atmospheric conditions in the US—whether local or global—this MCP has a dedicated tool. You get 7-day forecasts (get_forecast) alongside hourly details (get_hourly_forecast).
NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP use cases
Planning a deep-sea research dive
A researcher needs to know if the site is safe and when the water will be optimal. They ask their agent for 'a full dive report.' The agent uses get_water_levels, get_currents, and get_water_temperature simultaneously, giving a single readiness score.
Managing flight logistics in a storm zone
A dispatcher needs to know if an airport is safe for landing. They request the status by calling get_metar and checking get_sigmet reports. The agent confirms the current conditions and identifies any significant hazards immediately.
Modeling climate vulnerability
A city planner wants to know if a low-lying area will be impacted decades from now. They use get_sea_level_trends combined with get_climate_normals to build a robust risk model that accounts for long-term change.
Preparing for satellite operations
A tech company needs to schedule a sensitive uplink window. The agent first checks the Kp index and then cross-references it with get_solar_flux to ensure geomagnetic activity won't interfere with their data transmission.
NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP tradeoffs
What to watch out for, and the recommended way to handle each one.
Mixing up climate and weather scope
Asking the agent for 'the yearly forecast.' This is vague; it mixes long-term averages (climate) with short-term predictions (weather).
Be specific. If you want a 7-day prediction, use get_forecast. If you need to compare this year's rainfall to the historical average, use get_yearly_summary.
Ignoring location specificity for alerts
Simply asking 'Are there weather warnings?' without specifying a region means getting too much noise or missing the specific area entirely.
Always narrow it down. Use get_alerts_by_point if you have coordinates, or get_alerts_by_zone if you know the NWS zone ID.
Assuming all data is real-time
Thinking that 'historical' means immediate access. Some data requires specific tool calls.
Check your needs. To get historical weather, use get_daily_data or get_monthly_summary. For the absolute latest reading, call get_latest_observation.
When to use NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP
Use this MCP if your required data set crosses multiple domains: marine + aviation + climate OR space + weather + local observation. You need a single source of truth that can compare short-term events to long-term trends.
Don't use it if you only need one type of data, like just historical stock prices or traffic flow. For those singular needs, look for dedicated financial or GIS MCPs instead. If your requirement is purely localized and basic (e.g., 'What is the temperature right now?'), a simple single-point weather API might suffice, but this NOAA connection gives you the essential layer of complexity—the historical context, the severe alert structure, and the space factor—that makes planning accurate.
Frequently asked questions about NOAA Full — Ultimate Weather & Climate Intelligence MCP
How do I check for current severe weather warnings using get_active_alerts? +
You filter the alerts by US state (like TX or FL), severity level (Extreme, Severe, Moderate), or a specific event type to narrow down what you need. You'll get a list of all active, immediate threats.
Can I predict high and low tides for my boat using get_tide_predictions? +
Yes, this tool predicts the expected times and heights for both high and low tide at any specified US coastal station. It’s perfect for planning boating routes or fishing trips.
What is the difference between get_forecast and get_hourly_forecast? +
The standard get_forecast gives you a general 7-day summary (high/low temps, probability). The get_hourly_forecast provides a much deeper dive, giving temperature, wind speed, and humidity for every single hour over five days.
How do I check the current status of an airport using get_metar? +
You provide the airport's 3-letter ICAO code (like KJFK). The tool returns a detailed, raw report covering temperature, wind direction/speed, visibility, and cloud cover at that moment.
Is get_planetary_k_index useful for space weather planning? +
Absolutely. It measures geomagnetic activity from 0 to 9. A high Kp value means increased chances of visible auroras or potential disruptions to satellites and power grids.
Can I compare current sea level to historical trends using get_sea_level_trends? +
Yes, this tool calculates long-term relative sea level changes at a US coastal station by analyzing decades of recorded tide gauge data. This is critical for climate research.