 The Norwegian Meteorological Institute, Met Norway, has developed a new web portal which provides access to the latest operational data and the current state of sea ice, snow and permafrost in Norway, the Arctic and the Antarctic. This portal includes the latest addition, operational permafrost monitoring at Met Norway and methods for visualizing real-time permafrost temperature data. The latest permafrost temperatures are compared to the climatology generated from the station's data record, including median, confidence intervals, extremes and trends. Additionally, there are operational weather stations with extended measurement programs at these locations. These collocated monitoring efforts provide daily updated data for studying and monitoring the current state, trends, and the effects of extreme climate events on permafrost temperatures. Ground temperature rates obtained from the long-term records in the warmer permafrost found in Norway are typically 0.1 to 0.2 degrees Celsius per decade. In contrast, in the colder permafrost of the high Arctic on Svalbard, warming of up to 0.7 degrees Celsius per decade is apparent. The operational monitoring. This article was authored by Kettleis Aksen, Julia Lutz, Aetel McDonald's Rensen, and others.