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TAF Verification from a Customer Perspective. Dan Shoemaker Aviation Curmudgeon, NWS FWD From a 2005 study done with: Rick Curtis, Chief Meteorologist, SWA Paul Witsaman, Southern Region RAM. Motivation (now). Stats on Demand (SOD) verifies to five minute intervals.
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TAF Verification from a Customer Perspective Dan Shoemaker Aviation Curmudgeon, NWS FWD From a 2005 study done with: Rick Curtis, Chief Meteorologist, SWA Paul Witsaman, Southern Region RAM
Motivation (now) • Stats on Demand (SOD) verifies to five minute intervals. • I can’t forecast to five minute intervals! • Airlines can’t land in a five minute window. • SOD verification numbers seem low (CSI’s <50%) • Is this the best way to measure performance? • How might an airline customer measure performance?
TAF Study Overview • Pick a day when widespread weather was a factor. • Examine all SWA flights that landed in Southern Region (869 flights, 24 airports). • Use an airline perspective – • Look at “alternate fuel required” (2000/3) performance. • Did each flight’s planning TAF accurately reflect the landing conditions…was the extra fuel needed?
Dec 22, 2004 • Weather impacts included: • SN/PL/FZRA in ABQ AMA BHM BNA DAL LBB LIT MAF OKC TUL • FG in AMA CRP HOU IAH LBB LIT • +RA/SHRA/TSRA in BHM BNA HOU IAH JAN JAX MSY • MVFR/IFR ceiling/visibility at numerous other stations.
Detailed Methodology • For each flight: • Examine the TAF valid 2 hours prior to each flight’s take-off. This is assumed to be the TAF the dispatcher used to compute the fuel load. • Were conditions below 2000/3 forecast at each flight’s landing time (includes prevailing and TEMPO)?
Detailed Methodology (cont) • For each flight: • Examine all observations, include specials, within the hour bracketing each flight’s landing time. • If conditions below 2000/3 occurred at any time within the landing hour…assume alternate fuel was required (the TAF was “reasonable” since the weather occurred near landing time).
More Methodology • Verify the TAF against the observations for each flight creating the 2 x 2 contingency table. • TAF forecasted conditions below 2000/3? (Y/N) • Conditions below 2000/3 occurred at some time during landing hour? (Y/N)
Results POD FAR CSI Accuracy .891 Hits/(Hits + Misses) .220 FA/(FA + Hits) .713 Hits/(Hits + Misses + FA) .852 (Hits + Correct Neg)/Total
POD .891 FAR .220 CSI .713 Accuracy .852 Hits: Extra fuel costs were required. Correct Neg: Extra fuel costs were saved. False Alarms: NWS cost airlines money. Misses: Diversions possible*.
Stats on Demand vs This Study • SOD CSI for 2000/3 – unavailable (early 2005). SOD CSI for 1000/3 -- available. • I examined 3 comparable winter events from 2009 that produced similar 1000/3 CSI’s (and had 2000/3 CSI available). • Averaged 2000/3 CSI’s used as an approximate value for the TAFs used in this study. • Yes, this is an “apples to oranges” comparison. • But…ball park numbers still provide insight.
Stats on Demand CSI vs Study CSI • 2005 study CSI: .713 • SOD ballpark CSI: .425
Conclusion/Recommendations • Verifying five minute intervals makes verification scores look low. Real-world skill and value to customers are likely higher. • Concentrate on SOD scores vs guidance -- change focus to examine local improvement over models. (do we add value compared to an automated product?) • Use SOD results to look for weak areas. Negative forecasting will show up in the bias scores.
Any questions so far?And now for something completely different….. Monty Python
Improving TAFs • Intended for Aviation Program Leaders/ Forecasters • Real change has to be made locally-where the TAFs are written.
Improving TAFs • Biggest obstacle to change—office inertia. • You have to change your office culture. • …but APL’s have responsibility with no authority. • We can’t “make” anybody do anything. • What can you do?
Three Hour TAFs—a “How To” for APL’s • Decide to write them. You/MIC are the advocates. • Your customers want them. • Decide on which airports. • Widespread GA in North Texas - we write all our sites. • Obtain union cooperation. • I took a poll of all 12 forecasters, and got 12 “yes” votes. I did have to do some “lobbying”.
Three Hour TAFs—a “How To” for AFP’s • Let your customers/back-up sites know. • We issued a PNS; added a notice to Aviation AFDs; added a headline on web page; notified sister offices. • Decide on local procedures. • Make some AWIPS changes (alarms, etc).
Improving TAFs • Implement 3 hour TAF amendments. • Emphasize PPTAF best practices. • PPTAF minimizes bad TAF practices that hurt performance/verification. • If all forecasters use PPTAF practices, TAFs will be more consistent between forecasters/offices.
Improving TAFs • Use the AVNFPS conditional climatology. • For operations and research. • Encourage “optimistic” forecasts. • FWD’s PROB30’s “hurt” the TAF 99% of the time. • Coordinate/communicate with your CWSU.
Improving TAFs • Make sure your TAF writers know how they affect their customers. • “TEMPO 2124 1SM TSRA BKN035CB”
How do you make these “cultural”changes? • Use “force of personality” to get individual forecasters to improve. Group statements (emails to all, memos) don’t work. • Provide individual feedback. A number of FWD forecasters will tell you “I didn’t want to get a ‘Shoe’ talk, so I didn’t…” • Newton’s first law: Aviation programs at rest remain so. Change the comfort zone.
Improving TAFs • Provide formal feedback; office and individual. You can’t change what you don’t measure. • FWD - annual IFR/MVFR/alt reqd stats. • Performance vs SR and LAMP guidance. • 2000/3 is more important than total IFR. • Individual annual IFR/alt reqd performance vs office average and LAMP. • Results are kept anonymous.
Curmudgeon’s TAF Rules of Thumb • First, do no harm. • When in doubt, leave it out. • or -- optimism beats pessimism. • Airplanes will NOT fall out of the sky if you write optimistic TAFs. • Forecast the probable weather, not the worst possible weather.
Curmudgeon’s TAF Rules of Thumb • The TAF is not a portrait of the atmosphere, it is a stick figure. As long as it is anatomically correct, it’s a good representation.
Curmudgeon’s Forecaster Rule of Thumb “Constant abrasion produces the pearl…it’s a disease of the oyster.” Lenny Bruce
You cannot wait for improvements to come from above — so make them locally. If you make TAF improvement a priority —TAFs will improve. They need to improve. Most local improvements you can make involve effort, but zero cost. You don’t have to do what I do, but DO SOMETHING!
Questions/Discussion? Thanks for your time.