More Precise Weather Technology Assists in Validating Insurance Claims
With Danny, the first hurricane of the 2015 season, now underway, the new, state-of-the-art weather technology possessed by The National Storm Damage Center (NSC) is a timely and welcome addition to our informational resources. NSC declares itself to be the only weather company with meteorologists experienced in military, forensic technology, technology that can predict weather events with 95 percent accuracy and the only organization with rights to use such data for civilian application. The precision of this new technology leaves the 60 to 70 percent accuracy claims of other weather services in the dust.
Promising to have numerous significant purposes, the NSC’s new technology will undoubtedly:
Detect the precise strength, location and path of a storm in real time
Determine whether, and to what extent, the storm contains specific elements, such as wind or hail
Detect very specific locations of weather events, rather than regions
Detect very small storms and warn local homeowners as necessary
Save countless lives and make it possible to protect a great deal of property
Perhaps even more astonishing is the speed with which this advanced technology will become available to the public. It is predicted that a website launch will take place in as little as 3 weeks and a mobile app will launch within 6 months. This means that in the very near future anyone who possesses a smart phone will be able afford these remarkable products. Moreover, NSC plans to make important weather information available to schools at no cost, protecting children everywhere.
Perhaps even more astonishing is the speed with which this advanced technology will become available to the public. It is predicted that a website launch will take place in as little as 3 weeks and a mobile app will launch within 6 months. This means that in the very near future anyone who possesses a smart phone will be able afford these remarkable products. Moreover, NSC plans to make important weather information available to schools at no cost, protecting children everywhere.
This NSC data is a tremendous boon not only for homeowners, but for the insurance industry as well. It will also serve to resolve disputes between the two, since it will soon be possible to determine exactly what type of storm — hurricane, tornado, rainstorm, hailstorm or blizzard — has caused the damage to a particular house. It will also make it much easier to detect and prove a fraudulent claim.
Perhaps even more astonishing is the speed with which this advanced technology will become available to the public. It is predicted that a website launch will take place in as little as 3 weeks and a mobile app will launch within 6 months. This means that in the very near future anyone who possesses a smart phone will be able afford these remarkable products. Moreover, NSC plans to make important weather information available to schools at no cost, protecting children everywhere.