COPENHAGEN, Denmark, March 17,
2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The Danish Centre for AI
Innovation A/S (DCAI) is excited to announce a multi-year agreement
with the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI) to develop the next
generation of weather models on Gefion. The agreement follows
breakthrough results in a recent pilot project, which demonstrated
that new AI-powered models trained on Denmark's AI supercomputer Gefion approach the
accuracy of DMI's long-standing model in predicting temperature and
wind while significantly improving efficiency — running in minutes
rather than hours.
A specialized team of researchers at the Danish Meteorological
Institute (DMI) has, within a few months, developed a regional AI
weather model using the Gefion supercomputer. This new model is
competitive with an internationally developed weather model in key
parameters such as temperature and wind predictions.
The existing weather model is based on physical equations. Using
an initial set of observations, it calculates how the weather will
progress. This weather model has been under international
development for over 20 years, whereas the new AI model has been
trained on a large dataset for just a few months.
The AI model requires only a fraction of the computing power and
takes minutes to run, compared to the traditional model, which
takes several hours to compute. Preliminary results show that in
addition to being more efficient, the new AI weather model
approaches the accuracy of the current model in predicting
temperature and wind conditions.
This promising outcome has paved the way for a three-year
agreement between the Danish Centre for AI Innovation (DCAI), the
company operating the AI supercomputer Gefion, and DMI, with a goal
of advancing next-generation AI weather models.
"The pilot project has shown that DMI can leverage AI very
quickly and efficiently. We have several AI models in our pipeline
for predicting precipitation and cloud cover, which will directly
benefit from the experience we have gained in just a few months,"
says DMI meteorologist Kasper
Hintz.
"The collaboration between DCAI and DMI marks a significant step
forward in the application of AI to the very important field of
meteorology," says Nadia Carlsten,
CEO of the Danish Centre for AI Innovation.
"With AI supercomputing, we are unlocking new opportunities for
weather forecasting, and DMI's groundbreaking work is already
demonstrating how impactful this technology can be, including for
sustainability," she adds.
Great potential for society
Gefion is ranked 21st on the prestigious Top 500 list of the
world's most powerful supercomputers. Its powerful advanced
computing infrastructure can be applied to solve problems in
various sectors, from pharmaceutical and biotech applications to
AI-driven innovation.
In combination with traditional weather models, AI technology
like Gefion's is expected to deliver significant improvements to
daily weather forecasts and warnings, which are crucial for
national preparedness against extreme weather. Faster models that
can be run more frequently could enable emergency services and
other authorities to respond more quickly, potentially saving
critical infrastructure and, ultimately, lives during extreme
weather events.
Better and faster forecasts, such as cloud cover predictions,
will also be directly beneficial to the green transition. Solar
energy production for example is directly tied to the weather, and
ultra-short-term predictions of sunlight are an important factor
for electricity delivery to the consumers.
DCAI and DMI sign a three-year collaborative
agreement
While DMI's new AI model has already shown significant promise,
researchers emphasize that the journey is far from over. DCAI and
DMI have signed a three-year agreement that allows DMI researchers
to continue developing the next generation of weather models on
Gefion.
The extended collaboration is expected to provide the necessary
momentum to refine and expand AI-driven weather models, integrating
additional variables like precipitation and uncertainty
estimation.
"DMI's mission is to protect the Kingdom of Denmark from hazardous weather and provide the
best forecasts. That's why we explore new technologies like
artificial intelligence, and our pilot project on Gefion has
delivered significant results. Our partnership with DCAI now
enables more DMI projects to train on Gefion. At the same time, we
are strengthening a shared ambition with DCAI to establish a Danish
AI community that can develop sought-after AI skills and build
national expertise in the field," says Thomas Kjellberg, Deputy Director at DMI.
DMI is engaged in various research projects that incorporate AI
and machine learning in different ways. Several of these projects
require large-scale GPU training and the ability to train on
multiple GPU nodes — a dedicated computing unit within the
supercomputer with memory and storage — enabling fast data exchange
between nodes.
"The DMI pilot project has shown that Gefion can deliver fast
and tangible results for those at the forefront of innovation. We
are delighted that DMI has decided to enter into a long-term
collaboration with us following the project's outstanding results.
And we look forward to supporting their continued advancements in
AI-driven meteorology," says Nadia
Carlsten, CEO of the Danish Centre for AI
Innovation.
Facts | Gefion
- Gefion is Denmark's new AI
supercomputer and one of the most powerful in Europe and globally.
- The supercomputer was designed and optimized in collaboration
with NVIDIA to enable Denmark
and Europe to undertake
large-scale AI projects, such as training language models, weather
forecasting, quantum simulations, and biomedical research.
- Gefion consists of 1,528 NVIDIA H100 Tensor Core GPUs,
interconnected with high-speed fiber links and flash storage,
allowing researchers and AI developers to train and run massive
models on an international scale.
- Until now, this level of computing power has been reserved for
private tech giants in the U.S. or a few academic supercomputer
centers worldwide.
- With Gefion, Denmark has
created one of the first open digital laboratories, or "AI
factories," optimized for developing and testing new AI
technologies — on Danish soil, and with equal access for all
sectors.
Facts | DCAI
- The Danish Centre for AI Innovation (DCAI) owns and operates
Gefion. DCAI is a Danish company founded in 2024 and funded by
Denmark's Export and Investment
Fund (EIFO) and the Novo Nordisk Foundation.
- Its mission is to accelerate AI research and innovation at
universities, in the public sector, and among private companies —
from startups to large enterprises — by providing access to
computing power (Gefion), as well as strong AI expertise and
professional networks in supercomputing.
Facts | DMI and Supercomputers
- DMI was one of the first users of Gefion, which will now
advance to a long-term collaboration agreement.
- DMI owns and operates a supercomputer in Iceland in collaboration with UWC-West.
- DMI is part of the European weather center ECMWF, which
operates a supercomputer.
- DMI also utilizes platforms under the European EuroHPC GPU
collaboration.
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SOURCE Danish Centre for AI Innovation