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Analyst-grade US severe-weather tools for AI agents over MCP: warning polygons with IBW tags, SPC outlooks, RAP point environments, MRMS hail/rotation, storm reports, and a composite threat brief.

Project description

SHEARLINE

PyPI Python CI MCP Registry License: MIT

The severe-weather analyst your agent doesn't have. SHEARLINE is a free, MIT-licensed MCP server that gives AI agents analyst-grade US severe-weather tools: live warning polygons with Impact-Based Warning tags, SPC convective outlooks, RAP-derived point environments (CAPE/shear/SRH/STP computed with MetPy), MRMS radar-derived hail and rotation products, ground-truth storm reports, and a composite threat brief that synthesizes all of it. A dozen weather MCPs already wrap the basic forecast API; SHEARLINE deliberately skips everything they do and ships only what requires radar meteorology to expose correctly.

Informational only. Not a substitute for official NWS warnings. Every tool repeats this, because it matters: when weather threatens, follow official warnings from weather.gov and local authorities.

Tools

Tool What it returns
get_active_warnings(lat, lon, radius_km=40) Active tornado/severe-thunderstorm/flash-flood warning polygons with IBW tags (max hail size, max gust, tornado detection/damage threat), parsed storm motion, expirations, and whether the exact point is inside a polygon. Watches listed separately.
get_spc_outlook(lat, lon, day=1) SPC categorical risk (TSTM→HIGH) at the point plus tornado/hail/wind probabilities and significant-severe flags, days 1–3, with interpretation calibrated to the category.
get_point_environment(lat, lon) Latest RAP 13-km analysis profile computed with MetPy: MLCAPE/MUCAPE/CINs, LCL, 0–1/0–6 km shear, 0–1/0–3 km SRH, Bunkers motion, effective inflow layer, effective SRH/shear, SCP, and significant-tornado parameter — interpreted like an analyst (pulse vs. cool-season high-shear vs. classic supercell parameter space).
get_environment_trend(lat, lon) The anticipatory view: a short RAP forecast series (f00/f01/f03/f06, one consistent cycle) of MLCAPE, 0–6 km shear, 0–1 km SRH, SCP and STP, with an interpretation of the trajectory (intensifying / stabilizing / steady) — for "is this getting worse" rather than "what is it now."
get_mrms_severe(lat, lon, radius_km=40) MRMS maxima within radius: 60-min MESH (hail, inches and mm), low-level and mid-level rotation tracks (azimuthal shear), VIL, composite reflectivity — each with valid time and distance/bearing of the max.
get_storm_reports(lat, lon, radius_km=80, hours=6) Normalized Local Storm Reports: type, magnitude with units, time, location, distance/bearing, remarks.
get_lightning(lat, lon, radius_km=40, minutes=15) GOES-East GLM total-lightning activity in the recent window: flash count and rate, nearest strike (distance/bearing/time), and a tiered outdoor-safety interpretation (overhead / within-striking-distance / in-the-area).
get_historical_storm_reports(lat, lon, date, radius_km=80) What hail/wind/tornado hit a point on a specific past date (YYYY-MM-DD, UTC) — normalized reports with magnitude+units and distance/bearing, for the insurance / ag / forensic use case. Coverage from ~2005; preliminary LSRs, not the final NCEI record.
get_threat_brief(lat, lon) The showpiece: runs everything above concurrently and synthesizes a threat level (none/marginal/elevated/significant/extreme) with stated logic, hazards ranked, environment summary, nearest storm signature, and a recommended attention window.
get_radar_snapshot(lat, lon) Nearest WSR-88D's latest Level 2 volume metadata: VCP (scan strategy), max reflectivity with range/azimuth, coarse echo-top estimate.

Every tool returns structured JSON with data (numeric fields, units stated), interpretation (plain-language analyst sentences), degraded (which upstream sources failed, if any — partial data instead of errors), and the safety disclaimer.

Example: threat brief during a real outbreak

Real output from 2026-06-10, point inside an active tornado warning in northern Missouri:

{
  "threat_level": "extreme",
  "threat_logic": [
    "Tornado Warning in effect at the point, corroborated by confirmed tornado reports nearby — treat as an immediate life-safety situation.",
    "Severe Thunderstorm Warning at the point tagged 'Considerable' (hail to 1.75\", gusts to 60 mph).",
    "Significant-tornado parameter of 4.0 with storms ongoing — environment strongly supports tornadic supercells.",
    "MRMS MESH of 2.3\" hail within radius in the last hour.",
    "Intense rotation track (azimuthal shear 0.013 /s) nearby in the last hour.",
    "6 tornado report(s) near the point in the report window."
  ],
  "hazards_ranked": [
    {"hazard": "tornado", "level": "extreme"},
    {"hazard": "hail", "level": "extreme"},
    {"hazard": "damaging_wind", "level": "extreme"},
    {"hazard": "flash_flood", "level": "moderate"}
  ],
  "nearest_storm_signature": {
    "signature": "composite reflectivity", "value": "58.5 dBZ",
    "distance_km": 18.0, "direction": "ENE", "valid_utc": "2026-06-10T22:14Z"
  },
  "attention_window": {"window": "now", "until_utc": "2026-06-10T21:00:00-05:00"}
}

And the same tool for a quiet coastal Maine point reads as confidently quiet — not as an error: "threat_level": "none" with the environment numbers shown so the agent can see why it's quiet.

Install

Requires Python 3.12+ and uv. No API keys — every data source is public and anonymous. uvx downloads and runs the published package in one step; nothing is installed permanently.

Claude Code:

claude mcp add shearline -- uvx shearline

Claude Desktop (claude_desktop_config.json):

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "shearline": {
      "command": "uvx",
      "args": ["shearline"]
    }
  }
}

Streamable HTTP (for remote/agent-platform use):

uvx shearline --http --port 8741
# serves at http://127.0.0.1:8741/mcp

The HTTP transport is built to be hosted: it emits one structured JSON log line per tool call (tool, coarse 1° lat/lon bucket, latency, degraded list, cache hit/miss) and applies a per-client token-bucket rate limit, returning 429 with Retry-After when exceeded. Both are HTTP-only — stdio behaviour is unchanged. Configure via environment variables:

Env var Default Effect
SHEARLINE_RATE_RPM 60 sustained requests/minute/client (0 disables the limit)
SHEARLINE_RATE_BURST 30 token-bucket capacity (max burst)
SHEARLINE_HTTP_LOG 1 set 0 to silence per-request logging
SHEARLINE_LOG_LEVEL INFO log level for the shearline.http logger
SHEARLINE_UPSTREAM_CONCURRENCY 8 max concurrent upstream fetches (politeness toward NOAA)

To run the latest unreleased main instead of the PyPI release, swap shearline for --from git+https://github.com/lostnumber07/shearline shearline.

Why these tools

A forecast API tells you it might rain. None of the questions that matter on a severe weather day — is this storm rotating, how big is the hail, is the environment loaded for tornadoes, am I inside the polygon — are answerable from a forecast endpoint. They require the warning's IBW tags, radar-derived products, and a real sounding:

  • Warnings with IBW tags, not just warning text. A base-tier Severe Thunderstorm Warning and one tagged DESTRUCTIVE with 80 mph gusts are different planning problems. SHEARLINE parses the machine-readable tags (max hail size, max gust, tornado detection/damage threat) and the storm-motion vector, and does the point-in-polygon test for you.
  • The environment, computed honestly. CAPE without shear is a pulse-storm day; shear without CAPE is wind-driven rain. SHEARLINE pulls the current RAP analysis profile and computes the discriminating quantities with MetPy — including the effective inflow layer, effective SRH/shear, SCP, and STP — because high-CAPE/low-shear, low-CAPE/high-shear, and classic supercell parameter spaces produce very different hazards, and the interpretation says which one you're in.
  • MRMS, because warnings lag storms. MESH tells you what hail a storm has already produced; rotation tracks show where mesocyclones have tracked in the last hour — both on a ~2-minute cadence from the national radar mosaic, often ahead of the next warning update.
  • LSRs, because radar isn't ground truth. Spotter reports confirm what's actually reaching the ground.
  • One brief that reasons across all of it. The threat level is rule-based with the triggered rules quoted back, so an agent can audit the logic instead of trusting a vibe.

Data sources (all public, no keys)

Coverage is continental US only — out-of-bounds coordinates are rejected with a clear error. Upstream fetches are cached (warnings 60 s, MRMS 120 s, LSRs 300 s, outlooks/RAP 30 min) and degrade gracefully: if one source is down, you get partial data plus a degraded field, never a bare exception.

Recipes for non-meteorologists

You don't need to know what an STP is to use SHEARLINE. The .claude/skills/ directory ships three end-to-end recipes that name the exact tool sequence for a domain task — drop them into any agent that has SHEARLINE connected:

  • hail-claim-verification — did damaging hail occur at this address on this date? (insurance / forensic)
  • chase-day-briefing — outlook → environment → trend → warnings → radar, into a go/no-go with a target window (chase / EM)
  • event-day-lightning-watch — poll lightning proximity and issue suspend/shelter/resume calls by the 30-30 / 10-mile rules (venues / outdoor ops)

Architecture

SHEARLINE is a thin, layered async server: per-source fetch/parse modules feed a meteorology derivation layer, which feeds a uniform tool layer. Every tool returns the same {data, interpretation, degraded, disclaimer} envelope, every upstream call is TTL-cached, and one failing source degrades to partial data instead of an exception. See ARCHITECTURE.md for the module map, the request lifecycle of get_threat_brief, the concurrency model, and the upstream quirks each source module encodes.

Development

git clone https://github.com/lostnumber07/shearline && cd shearline
uv sync
uv run pytest          # offline test suite against recorded fixtures
uv run ruff check .
uv run shearline       # stdio
uv run python scripts/smoke.py   # live smoke test, both transports

See ARCHITECTURE.md for how to add a tool or data source.

License

MIT © Backshear LLC. Weather data is produced by NOAA/NWS and other public services; this project is not affiliated with or endorsed by NOAA.

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