Discussion on applications and research projects
• Applications activities, including sectors, lead times, and forecast tailoring.
‣ Use of selected case studies, such as floods, droughts, heat waves etc.
• Research activities, including calibration, multi-model ensembles, ensemble generation and spread, forecast intercomparisons, sources of predictability....
• We need to be sure we are archiving all reasonable variables needed for applications.
• How should the use of the dataset for research and applications be promoted?
• Input from various centres has been sought.
Outline
Applications Activities
• Growing, and urgent, requirement for the employment of sub-seasonal predictions for a wide range of societal and economic applications which include:
• Warnings of the likelihood of severe high impact weather (droughts, flooding, wind storms etc.) to help protect life and property
• Humanitarian Planning and Response to disasters
• Agriculture particularly in developing countries — e.g. wheat and rice production
• Disease planning/control — e.g. malaria, dengue and meningitis
• River-flow — for flood prediction, hydroelectric power generation and reservoir management for example
• Weather and climate span a continuum of time scales, and forecast information with different lead times are relevant to different sorts of decisions and early-warning
• In agriculture, for example, a seasonal forecast might inform a crop-planting choice, while sub-monthly forecasts could help irrigation scheduling, pesticide/fertilizer application: both can make a cropping calendar dynamic.
• In situations where seasonal forecasts are already in use, sub-seasonal ones could be used as updates, such as for end-of-season crop yields.
• Sub-seasonal forecasts may play an especially important role where initial conditions and intraseasonal oscillation is strong, while seasonal predictability is weak, such as the Indian summer monsoon.
Distribution of risk and opportunityDistribution of risk and opportunity
Ris
k analy
sis
Ris
k analy
sis
Input
supply
In
put
supp
ly
managem
ent
managem
ent
Farm
er
Farm
er
advis
ori
es
advis
ori
es
Food security Food security early warning, early warning,
planningplanning
Trade planning, Trade planning, strategic importsstrategic imports
Insu
rance
In
sura
nce
evalu
ati
on,
evalu
ati
on,
payout
payout
Insu
rance
In
sura
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co
ntr
act
desi
gn
contr
act
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APPLI
CA
TIO
NA
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CA
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NThe agricultural risk & planning calendarThe agricultural risk & planning calendar
Time of year
Unce
rtain
ty (
e.g
., R
MSEP)
seaso
nal
fore
cast
pla
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ng
mark
eti
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harv
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growing season
EV
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J. Hansen et al. (IRI)J. Hansen et al. (IRI)
Rice-planting area in Indramayu, JavaStart of planting changes from time to time, in planting season 97/98, start of planting delayed 1 month due to delay onset of rainfall, increasing drought risk for the second crop, except in La-Nina years
Source: Boer et al. (2004)
Rainfall (m
m)
Pla
ntin
g A
rea
(ha)
rice rice Fallow
Cropping Pattern
Examples of Ongoing Applications Activities
• Environment Canada:
‣ Forecast of extreme agrometeorological indices across Canada. Right now, we are doing this with the 16-day ensemble forecasts. We plan to apply to the monthly system.
‣ Hydrometeorological forecast for the Great Lakes. It is run in an experimental mode. One component is to use the monthly ensemble forecast to force the hydrological model.
• ECMWF — 3 European projects:
‣ SafeWind (wind ensemble forecasts for the energy sector). Medium-range focus, but interest in the sub-seasonal time scale.
‣ Applications in hydrology and real-time flood forecasting, using ECMWF monthly forecasting system, demonstrated useful skill. Also use TIGGE.
‣ Prediction of African rainfall and temperature for disease prevention (Malaria, Dengue, Yellow fever..) (QWECI).
• CAWCR/BoM:
‣ Prediction of heat waves, including understanding of the role of large-scale circulation as pre-cursor, ability forecast model to capture these larges scale drivers, and development of some experimental prediction products. Funded by an agricultural consortium.
• UKMO:
‣ Predictability of the temporal distribution of rainfall through the seasons, with specific reference to Africa (e.g. season onset, cessation, risk of in-season dry spells). Currently seasonal system; preliminary look at this in the ECMWF monthly system.
‣ Frequency of daily temperature extremes & 'heatwaves' also of interest & rainfall extremes over Africa.
‣ Reservoir inflow forecast for Ghana, on seasonal timescale.
‣ Sudden stratospheric warmings also of interest for European winter cold spells.
• NCEP
‣ MJO & Global Tropical Hazard
‣ Prediction of consecutive days of extreme temperature
‣ Prediction of Blocking and circulation indices
‣ Prediction of Tropical storms and Atlantic Hurricanes
‣ Prediction of onset dates of various monsoon systems
‣ Prediction of Active/break phases of Indian monsoons
‣ Prediction of sudden stratospheric warming events
• JMA
‣ Heatwave and flood prediction on a sub-seasonal time scale
Data Needs for Applications
• Availability of long hindcast histories are needed to develop and test regression-based “MOS” and tailoring models, and for skill estimation which is critical to applications.
• Daily data is needed, especially for a few key variables including precipitation and near-surface temperature and windspeed.
• Issues of open data access to enable uptake
Research activities
• Verification and inter-comparison of the sub-seasonal forecasting systems
‣ also comparing the skill with seasonal forecasting systems (at some centers have different type of initialization, different resolutions...)
• Multi-model combinations, Calibration
• Defining a metric for sub-seasonal forecasts
• Prediction and predictability of extreme events: summer heat waves, winter cold waves, flooding, tropical cyclones...
• Investigating sources of predictability, e.g.:
‣ impact of sea-ice, snow, soil moisture initial conditions on sub-seasonal predictions...
‣ impact of the MJO on extratropical circulation
‣ modulation of tropical cyclones by the MJO
‣ stratosphere-troposphere interaction
Processes that act as sources of ISI climate predictability extend over a wide range of timescales, and involve interactions among the atmosphere, ocean, and land. CCEW: convectively coupled equatorial waves (in the atmosphere); TIW: tropical instability wave (in the
ocean); MJO/MISV: Madden-Julian Oscillation/Monsoon intraseasonal variability; NAM: Northern Hemisphere annular mode; SAM: Southern Hemisphere annular mode; AO: Arctic oscillation; NAO: North Atlantic oscillation; QBO: quasi-biennial oscillation, IOD/ZM: Indian Ocean
dipole/zonal mode; AMOC: Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. For the y-axis, “A” indicates “atmosphere;” “L” indicates “land;” “I” indicates “ice;” and, “O” indicates “ocean.”
Example of the relationship among tropical outgoing long-wave radiation (OLR, left column), which is used to define the phase of the MJO, wintertime (JFM) 500-hPa geopotential height anomalies (middle column), and precipitation anomalies (right column). For example, Phase 5 (the middle row) of the MJO exhibits enhanced convection over the Maritime Continent that is accompanied by deep-troughing in the mid-troposphere over the North Pacific and enhanced precipitation in the Pacific Northwest. SOURCE: Adapted from Bond and Vecchi (2003).
http://www.meted.ucar.edu/tropical/textbook/
from COMET training materials
Stratospheric impact on weather?
Fig. 2. Composites of time-height development of the northern annular mode for (A) 18 weak vortex events and (B) 30 strong vortex events. The events are determined by the dates on which the 10-hPa annular mode values cross –3.0 and
+1.5, respectively. The indices are nondimensional; the contour interval for the color shading is 0.25, and 0.5 for the white contours. Values between –0.25 and 0.25 are unshaded. The thin horizontal lines indicate the approximate
boundary between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
Baldwin & Dunkerton (2001)
Inertial memory due to soil moisture
A positive soil moisture anomaly at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement/Cloud and Radiation Testbed (ARM/CART) site in Oklahoma decreases with a time scale much longer than
the atmospheric events that caused it. SOURCE: Greg Walker, personal communication. Soil moisture time scales measured at other sites are even longer than this (Vinnikov and
Yeserkepova, 1991).
Areas for which the numerical models participating in the GLACE study tend to agree that variations in soil moisture exert some control on variations in precipitation. The variable plotted is the average across models of a land-atmosphere coupling strength diagnostic; the insets show how the magnitude of this diagnostic differs amongst the participating
models. SOURCE: Koster et al. (2004).