Scroll over the key messages (KM#1-7) to view them and select individual stories by key message.
- High and Dry: Learning from the 1997-1998 El Niño's effects on water resources in American Samoa
- Remembering What a Healthy Reef Looks Like: A community-based reef restoration and education program in Humåtak, Guam
- "The actual sea went all the way up": Coastal Flooding on Manus, Papua New Guinea, December 2008
- The Cloud Nasara: The development and use of the ENSO Handbook in Vanuatu
- Seesawing: Coastal Change in Ngaraard, Palau
- Finding CLEWS in the Rain: The development of MalaClim, the Solomon Islands' climate early warning system (CLEWS) for Malaria
- In the Dark of Monday Morning: The Coastal flooding on Majuro in March 2014
- Finding CLEWS in the Rain: The development of MalaClim, the Solomon Islands' climate early warning system (CLEWS) for Malaria
- The Cloud Nasara: The development and use of the ENSO Handbook in Vanuatu
- Symbiosis: Responding to Coral Bleaching in the Two Samoas
- High and Dry: Learning from the 1997-1998 El Niño's effects on water resources in American Samoa
- "I'm Not a Professional Weather Person - I'm a Pearl Farmer": Adapting Pearl Farming Best Practices to Climate Variability and Change
- "It's Falling from the Sky but Not Hitting the Ground":Drought in the outer atolls of the Marshall Islands in 2013
- Finding CLEWS in the Rain: The development of MalaClim, the Solomon Islands' climate early warning system (CLEWS) for Malaria
- Symbiosis: Responding to Coral Bleaching in the Two Samoas
- "I'm Not a Professional Weather Person - I'm a Pearl Farmer": Adapting Pearl Farming Best Practices to Climate Variability and Change
- Remembering What a Healthy Reef Looks Like: A community-based reef restoration and education program in Humåtak, Guam
Climate services
Climate services - the development and delivery of actionable information about climate patterns and trends and their impacts on communities, businesses and ecosystems - is essential to many aspects of policy, planning, and decision-making in Pacific Island countries. Consultation with decision makers is critical to ensuring such information is useful, useable and used. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), with its globally recognized scientific and technical expertise, is in a unique position to work with the Pacific Island Meteorological Services and other regional organizations to support robust and sustained capacity development consistent with the Global Framework for Climate Services.