David D'Arcangelo (1994 B.S., 2000 M.S.)
Energy Meteorologist
I graduated from Penn State in 1994 and earned a commission into the Air Force. My first duty assignment was at Andrews AFB, MD performing world-wide, aviation forecasts for Air Force One and other military missions. Working in a high-visibility environment allowed me to develop my communication skills and learn to make forecasts that identified risk and uncertainty. I subsequently worked at the Pentagon where I continued to support White House operations and also had the chance to forecast for many overseas locales. This world-view has proven crucial in understanding global weather patterns and learning to forecast by using models as only a means to make a forecast, not the only way. I returned to Penn State for my M.S. (’00) and then continued to work aviation meteorology for Delta Air Lines.
Despite the breadth of experience in the early part of my career I
desired to utilize my expertise in an area where there was a direct,
measurable financial impact to forecasts. The commodities world is such
a place where your communication, forecasting and risk assessment skills
are really “on the line” every day. My initial exposure
into the commodities world was at Cinergy Corp. in Cincinnati –
a natural gas and electricity utility that used forecasts to make operational
and trading decisions. Over the course of 4+ years at Cinergy I had
the privilege to hire and work with Mike Gasper and Richard Surace,
both of whom are profiled on this web-site. They have taken different
and interesting paths but are both ingrained in the risk management
part of energy trading and are experts in this field. I left Cinergy
in 2005 to join the commodities team at a private company. I continue
to work with energy trading but have expanded into weather derivatives
trading and agricultural commodities. There are many paths one can take
to work in an environment where meteorology is a valued piece of information
for making decisions about the financial value of a commodity. One prerequisite
is solid communication skills and a desire to prove how good you are
on a daily basis. Successful meteorologists in this field possess an
ability to identify risk and summarize complex information quickly.
The financial world moves fast and every day presents a new, often more-difficult
challenge. I have been forecasting for 12 years and I am humbled almost
daily in an effort to make and communicate more-skilled forecasts that
assist my team in being more profitable. The commodities and financial
markets are places where “risk-management” is a tangible,
oft discussed and debated idea and weather plays the most significant
role.
David D'Arcangelo
Energy Meteorologist
Please contact Lynn Persing (persing@ems.psu.edu) in the Department of Meteorology if you are interested in contacting this alumnus.
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