1 / 81

The fundamentals of Seasonal Forecasting

RA VI Clips Workshop. The fundamentals of Seasonal Forecasting. J.P. Céron – Météo-France. Some Vocabulary. Long Range Forecasts and Climate Forecasts Forecast Range, Forecast period and Lead time. Lead Time. Forecast Period. Forecast issue time. Forecast Range. LT - 1 month.

rendor
Télécharger la présentation

The fundamentals of Seasonal Forecasting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RA VI Clips Workshop The fundamentals of Seasonal Forecasting J.P. Céron – Météo-France

  2. Some Vocabulary • Long Range Forecasts and Climate Forecasts • Forecast Range, Forecast period and Lead time. Lead Time Forecast Period Forecast issue time Forecast Range

  3. LT - 1 month Seasonal Forecast 1 May June July Aug Sept Octo Nov Forecast issue time Coupled Forecast : Range of 6 months

  4. LT - 2 month Seasonal Forecast 2 May June July Aug Sept Octo Nov Forecast issue time Coupled Forecast : Range of 6 months

  5. LT - 3 month Seasonal Forecast 3 May June July Aug Sept Octo Nov Forecast issue time Coupled Forecast : Range of 6 months

  6. The Scientific bases • The evolution of the atmosphere is partly driven by the evolution of external forcing conditions (SST and continental surfaces). • The evolution of external forcings is often slow and predictable. It gives a slow memory to the atmosphere ; the evolution of the latter becoming partly predictable. • The successive instantaneous states of the atmosphere have a limited predictability while the mean states of the atmosphere have a greater predictability. • The mean circulation in tropical regions is strongly inflenced by the large scale organised convection.

  7. Limitation of numerical forecast : Daily forecast Daily Scores over Northern Hemisphere

  8. Limitation of numerical forecast : Daily forecast Daily Scores over Northern Hemisphere + Persistence Scores

  9. Limitation of numerical forecast : Daily forecast Daily Scores over Northern Hemisphere + Perfect model Scores

  10. Limitation of numerical forecast : Monthly forecast Daily Scores over Northern Hemisphere + Monthly running mean Scores

  11. Limitation of numerical forecast : Seasonal forecast Daily Scores over Northern Hemisphere + seasonal running mean Scores

  12. Limitation of numerical forecast : Seasonal forecast Daily Scores over Northern Hemisphere + Ensemble forecast, seasonal running mean and SST forecast

  13. The Predictability « a Thunderstorm will be observed next Sunday over the Toulouse « Météopole » between 15h and 16h »  Irrealistic, the confidence that one can have in this forecast is very low « a rainy system will cross the Toulouse region Sunday afternoon  »  realistic, one can be quite confident in this forecast

  14. The Predictability The predictability depends on : • The scale of the forecasted phenomenum (Thunderstorm, Easterly Wave, Blocking situation, ENSO, …) • The Range of the forecast (NowCasting, Short , Medium , Seasonnal , Climatic)

  15. Predictability • Space Scales • Local  10-100 km • Regional  100-1000 km • Synoptic  1000-5000 km • Supra-synoptic > 5000- km seasonal Forecasting - supra-synoptic scales

  16. Predictability • Actors and Associated Scales

  17. Predictability • The different views of the Predictability • Through the observations • Through the models

  18. The evolution of external forcing conditions • Evolution of Sea Surface temperature (SST) • Interannual variability (like ENSO) • Decadal variability (like PDO) • Evolution of continental surface conditions • Influence of continental surface conditions (snow, albedo, ..), • Intraseasonal variability (notably soil moisture), • Mutual influences • Decadal/ENSO • ENSO/Intraseasonal • Intraseasonal/Synoptic

  19. The ENSO • The planetary influence of El Niño (left) and La Niña (right)

  20. The ENSO • Through the observations in Winter

  21. The ENSO • Through the observations in Summer

  22. The ENSO • Through the observations in Winter

  23. The ENSO • Through the observations in Summer

  24. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting • The climatic variability • The forecasting models • Statistical models • SST forced Atmospheric General Circulation Models • Ocean/Atmosphere Coupled General Circulation Models • The verifications • Verification of the forecasts • Verification of the usefulness of the forecats • The chaos • Link with the climatic variability • Link with the ensemble forecast

  25. The fundamentals of Seasonal Forecasting • The climatic variability : slow variation in the Atmosphere • NAO • PNA mode • PDO • QBO or TBO • http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/teledoc/telecontents.html and Barnston and Livezey 1987, Mon. Wea. Rev., 115, 1083-1126) East Atlantic (EA) , East Atlantic Jet (EA-Jet) , East Atlantic/Western Russia , Scandinavia (SCAND) , Polar/Eurasia Asian Summer , West Pacific (WP) , East Pacific (EP) , North Pacific (NP) , Tropical/Northern Hemisphere (TNH) , Pacific Transition (PT)

  26. The « North Atlantic Oscillation»

  27. The « North Atlantic Oscillation» Temperature in Winter Rainfall in Winter

  28. The Pacific Decadal Oscillation 

  29. The Pacific Decadal Oscillation 

  30. The climatic variability

  31. The climatic variability

  32. The fundamentals of Seasonal Forecasting • The climate variability

  33. The fundamentals of Seasonal Forecasting • The climatic variability

  34. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting • The climatic variability

  35. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting • The climatic variability Atlantic “El Nino” – Pirata buoy network

  36. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting • The climatic variability JAS Observed Sahel Rainfall Vs JAS Observed THC index r = 0.45

  37. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting Forecasting models • Statistical models • SST forced Atmospheric Global Circulation Models • Océan/Atmosphère Coupled General Circulation Models

  38. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models East African Rainfall vs Nino3 Index Thank’s to Simon Mason

  39. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models East African Rainfall vs Nino3 Index

  40. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models East African Rainfall vs Nino3 Index

  41. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models

  42. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models

  43. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models

  44. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models

  45. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting The Statistical models

  46. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting • Numerical models

  47. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting • The numerical models

  48. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting • Coupled vs Forced models

  49. Coupled vs Forced models

  50. The fundamentals of seasonal Forecasting Forecast Verifications • Verification in « real time » (following up of the bias, pointing out and monitoring of the errors, …), • Verification in hindcast forecast mode , • Verification of the predictability of forecasting events, • Verification of the forecast value in a user’s point of view, • Verification of the use and impact of the forecast, • « Deterministic » vs « Probabilistic » Verifications • Comparison with climatology and persistence (often use as references by users), … • Problem of relevant and reliable dataset for verification purpose.

More Related