Definition
NNEW is an FAA program developed as part of NextGen to provide a single, common, network-based source of weather information for use by pilots, controllers, dispatchers, and automated air traffic systems. It collects weather data from many sources, fuses it into a consistent picture, and distributes it across the National Airspace System so that everyone making decisions is working from the same weather information.
Plain English
A shared weather data system that gives pilots, controllers, and airline dispatchers the same weather picture at the same time, so decisions about routes and delays are made from one agreed source instead of several different ones.
Context Anchor
Seen in NextGen discussions about how weather information is collected, shared, and used for flight planning and air traffic decisions.
Derivation
The name describes its purpose: it is the next generation of weather services, and it is network enabled, meaning the weather data is delivered through a shared digital network rather than being produced and distributed separately by individual systems.
Why Pilots Care
Gives pilots faster access to accurate weather, supporting better route decisions and reducing weather-related risks.
Intuition Check
NNEW does not mean a new kind of weather. It means a newer way of sharing aviation weather information through connected systems.
Example Sentence 1
Under NextGen, NNEW is intended to give controllers and pilots a common weather picture when planning around a line of thunderstorms.
Example Sentence 2
Controllers used NNEW feeds to provide updated weather advisories during the approach.