Proven track record

The best way to learn about WSI is to read quotes from those that depend on us day in and day out - our customers.  WSI strives to offer the most comprehensive services for both the Energy Trading and Operational Utility sectors and we have the track record to prove it. We are able to do this by understanding our customers and how weather impacts their businesses, and then striving to continuously deliver innovative products, superior forecasting, and outstanding customer service.


  WSI Customer Quotes

  "BGE would like to commend WSI forecasters on the fine job they did with Thursday's Ice Storm. We found the forecasts to be accurate and consistent over a period of days. We value that aside from hurricanes, ice storms are one of the hardest weather phenomenon to predict." - Claude E. Peacock, BGE

  "As a meteorologist working in the energy industry, I feel WSI’s forecast abilities and model data is one of the best in the industry. Their current model data is superior to other private weather companies as well as the National Weather Services. Their timely driven model data gets the information to me so I can pass the information onto my traders just ahead of the market. I could not perform at the outstanding level in my current job without WSI." Michael T. Gasper, NRG

 

"Since Dr. Todd Crawford's arrival at WSI, the scientific integrity of WSI forecasts has been second to none. Dr. Crawford's occasional contrarian monthly and seasonal outlooks, based more on good science than unreliable analogs, have provided substantial opportunities for profit in the minefield of longer term trading." Jason Lynn, Manager of Meteorology, PPM Energy


 
"We specifically like the updates on weather and storms. I think the WSI Energycast NatGas site is one of the best sites I have seen." Brian Redd, Southwest Energy

  WSI Forecast Skill

  January 2006: WSI only major weather vendor to forecast warm temperatures in the Northeast.

November 2005:
WSI only major weather vendor to forecast warm temperatures in the East.

Fall 2005: WSI first weather vendor to mention that a La Nina was developing, and would significantly impact the 2005-06 winter season.

Summer 2005: WSI successfully focused on Great Lakes/Ohio Valley heat for summer 2005, while other weather vendors forecasted a very cool summer.

June 2005: After a very cold spring, WSI was the only vendor to correctly capture the sharp transition to heat in June. The transition was also noted in the medium-range forecast.

Winter 2004-05: WSI successfully forecasted a cold and snowy Northeast.

December 2003: WSI forecasters noted the onset of a stratospheric warming event, and were able to use this information to correctly predict (in medium-range and seasonal forecasts)a brutally cold January 2004.

April 2003: WSI used enhanced wording in its European seasonal forecast to warn of the impending record hot summer in Europe.

October 2002: WSI successfully forecast the rapid transition to cold weather and the change in Pacific ocean temperatures (PDO) ahead of the other vendors.

Winter 2001-02: WSI only major vendor to forecast a warm winter in the East.

 
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