The company's metservice.com website has increased in popularity over the year, following a relaunch in December, with average daily visits up 28 per cent, ranking it as one of the nation's most popular sites.
The MetService is New Zealand's oldest scientific institution, with a history dating back to the early years of British colonial rule in 1861 when an extension of the electric telegraph system enabled it to collect daily weather reports from far flung settlements.
A spate of shipwrecks prompted the government to start a storm-warning service as part of the marine department in 1874, when an average 25 vessels were totally wrecked each year along the coastline.
The MetService has been shuttled between seven government departments in its history, and has even come under the control of the Air Force. Unlike its overseas counterparts such as the US-based National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration which is a non-profit government department, the MetService moved to a commercial focus on July 1, 1992.
The company, which has paid out $47.2 million in dividends since becoming an SOE, will pay a dividend of $2.3 million to the Crown, following a decision at a board meeting last week.
Since its June 30 balance date, MetService in August bought a 49 per cent stake oceanic consultancy MetOcean Solutions, giving it a foothold in a market worth more than $10 million. The $3 million purchase was funded by bank borrowing. In 2013, MetService reduced its borrowings by $2 million to $15 million.