John Farley

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Chief Meteorologist

 

John Farley has worked as a Meteorologist for more than 20 years and is honored to be the Chief Meteorologist for ABC Columbia. He understands the challenges of forecasting the ever-changing weather of the Midlands. That was never more important than on Saturday night October 3rd, when the worst storm of a generation dropped up to 21 inches of rain right here in Columbia. During that storm, John spent the night and following day in continuous coverage, warning viewers of the perils of the flooding. He says, “It’s a period of 36 hours that has left an indelible imprint on me. Seeing our neighbors, whose lives are now changed forever because of the power of this storm, is very impacting.”

Before joining ABC Columbia, he was the Chief Meteorologist for NBC Affiliate in Columbia for 5 years. Prior to that he was at KNTV, the NBC affiliate in San Francisco, where he was the Chief Meteorologist for 9 years. John is an EMMY Award winning meteorologist, and is a Certified Broadcast Meteorologist (CBM) with the American Meteorological Society. He holds a Master of Science Degree in Meteorology from San Jose State University, in San Jose, California, where he received the honor of Graduate of the Last Decade from the College of Science in 2001.

While in Graduate School, John worked with a team to create mathematical models that forecast the fog at San Francisco International Airport. His team was given the Excellence in Aviation Award from the FAA in 2002. John Farley is happy to report that the FAA still uses those models today. While in California, John also worked as a consultant for a power company which provides gas & electricity to roughly 16 million people. His responsibilities included temperature, wind, snow, and severe weather forecasting, as well as providing long-term electricity generation forecasts for proposed wind farms.

John loves to talk weather and he has visited with thousands of students over the past 20 years. He lives in Lexington with his wife and three children. They are all thrilled to call the Midlands home.

John Farley

Articles

Global Warming is Causing Hurricanes to Quickly Intensify

The oceans are absorbing about 90% of the heat from Global Warming.  The hotter oceans are causing hurricanes to intensify a lot faster than they used to.   You can read all of the details here: https://abcnews.go.com/US/climate-change-making-atlantic-hurricanes-strengthen-weak-major/story?id=104039515

Two Tropical Storms in the Atlantic

There are two tropical storms in the Atlantic Ocean - Philippe and Rina.  Both of them are more than 1500 miles from the southeastern US coastline.  And it appears that both of them will stay harmlessly far away from any…

August Was Hotter and Wetter Than Normal in Columbia

This August, Columbia was hotter than normal and wetter than normal. The average temperature of 82.6°F was 1.6° above normal, and the 5.71 inches of precipitation was 123% of the normal amount (data are from SC-ACIS and normal is defined…

Possible Tropical Storm Developing Off Our Coast

There is a blob of moisture off our coast that, over the next several days, could eventually turn into a tropical storm - see the yellow circle below.  At this point the threat of this happening isn't terribly high, but…

Category 5 Hurricanes in Every Ocean Basin This Year

Dr. Jonathan Overpeck, Professor at the University of Michigan tweeted this:  "This is what human-caused climate change looks like: Cat 5 storms this year in every ocean - for the first time in recorded history." You can read all the…