National Weather Service Launches Updated Forecast Graphics Page for Arctic Alaska
NWS Fairbanks rolled out an updated forecast graphics page covering Utqiaġvik temperatures and Arctic weather patterns.

The National Weather Service office in Fairbanks rolled out an updated forecast graphics webpage, offering North Slope residents a cleaner visual window into the Arctic weather patterns that shape daily life in one of the most climatically demanding regions on Earth.
The updated page covers Utqiaġvik temperature forecasts alongside Interior snow data, consolidating two of the most closely watched variables for communities across the North Slope and beyond. The redesign prioritizes easier visualization, reducing the friction involved in reading forecast data that can carry life-or-death implications for hunters, travelers, and anyone moving across the tundra or sea ice.
For Utqiaġvik, where winter temperatures routinely plunge well below zero and conditions can shift rapidly, accessible forecast graphics are not a convenience but a practical necessity. The NWS Fairbanks office serves an enormous geographic footprint, and the updated page reflects an effort to make its data more legible to the communities farthest from the office itself.

The launch came as the region transitions through late winter, a period when travel conditions on the North Slope remain hazardous and accurate short-range forecasting carries particular weight. Interior snow coverage, also featured on the updated page, affects conditions across a broad swath of Alaska that connects to North Slope supply chains and travel corridors.
The updated forecast graphics page is accessible through the National Weather Service Fairbanks website.
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