A Tropical Cyclone Regional Specialized Meteorological Centre is responsible for detecting tropical cyclones in its designated area of responsibility, and for providing basic information about the
systems present and their forecast position, movement and intensity. There are six such meteorological centres in addition to four regional Tropical Cyclone Warning Centres (TCWCs) that all provide public tropical cyclone advisory messages and assist other National Meteorological and Hydrological Services in preparing alerts and warnings for their respective countries. In addition, all of the centres are responsible for naming tropical cyclones when they develop into or become equivalent to tropical storms in their area of responsibility, with the exceptions of RSMC La Reunion and TCWC Wellington. • The United States
National Hurricane Center (NHC/RSMC Miami) is responsible for the tracking of tropical cyclones within the Atlantic Ocean and Eastern Pacific basins. • The United States
Central Pacific Hurricane Center (CPHC/RSMC Honolulu) provides satellite fixes for the Western Pacific and Southern Pacific basins and tropical cyclone warnings for the Central Pacific basin and in the Eastern Pacific basin if the NHC is too busy with the Atlantic basin or is incapacitated in any way. • The
Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA/RSMC Tokyo) is responsible for issuing advisories within the Western Pacific basin. • The
India Meteorological Department (IMD/RSMC New Delhi) is responsible for tracking tropical cyclones within the North Indian Ocean. • MFR/
RSMC La Réunion (
Météo-France) is responsible for the issuing advisories and tracking of tropical cyclones in the southwest Indian Ocean. • The Australian
Bureau of Meteorology (BOM/TCWC Melbourne), the Indonesian
Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysical Agency (BMKG/TCWC Jakarta) and the Papua New Guinea National Weather Service (TCWC Port Moresby) are responsible for the naming and tracking of tropical cyclones within the Australian region. • Within the Southern Pacific the
Fiji Meteorological Service (FMS, RSMC Nadi) is responsible for the naming of tropical cyclones for the whole basin, however, the
Meteorological Service of New Zealand (MetService, TCWC Wellington) issues forecasts for the area below 25°S. • Although the South Atlantic is not officially considered a tropical cyclone basin, starting 2011, the
Brazilian Navy Hydrographic Center has developed
three naming lists used to identify cyclones that form south of the equator and west of longitude 20 degrees west. ==See also==