New Forecast Model to Help Severe Weather Preparation

The two year project looks to improve forecast predictions that would look three to four weeks out, considered the “new frontier” in forecasting.
Week 3-4 Forecast Model

Predicting the weather three to four weeks in advance is extremely challenging, yet many critical decisions affecting communities and economies must be made that far in advance. Now, for the first time, model forecasts could help NOAA’s operational Climate Prediction Center (CPC) significantly improve its week 3 and 4 temperature and precipitation outlooks for the U.S.,  helping decision makers and managers prepare for hazards like heat waves, cold spells, heavy rain, and even hurricanes.

The Subseasonal Experiment (SubX) is a two-year project, led by Ben Kirtman, professor of atmospheric science, that combines multiple global models from NOAA, NASA, Environment Canada, the Navy, and National Center for Atmospheric Research to produce once-a-week real-time experimental forecasts as well as a set of forecasts for past dates, called reforecasts, now available to both CPC and the research community.

“The multi-model reforecasts perfectly dovetail with the real-time forecasts so that you can perform a robust calibration and skill assessment,” said Kirtman, who heads the Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies and the Center for Computational Science Climate and Environmental Hazards Program. “The research you do can immediately translate into potential improvements of an operational product, and that’s really exciting.”

Also exciting, especially in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma’s rampage across the Caribbean and Florida this month, is SubX’s potential for predicting near-term hurricane activity.

“It definitely could help with hurricanes,” Kirtman said. “Essentially, we want to be able to predict that 3 to 4 weeks from today there is either a greater or a reduced chance of hurricanes developing.”

The SubX reforecasts are being produced for 1999-2015, providing a robust dataset that CPC forecasters can compare to known conditions from that time to adjust the real-time SubX forecasts and improve the week 3-4 outlooks.

The one-year, real-time predictions provide CPC with additional models to experimentally guide the week 3-4 outlooks, which previously used only 1-3 models. In addition, the external community is able to access the data for research to better model sources of predictability that underpin NOAA’s ability to produce skillful predictions in this timescale.

“Ultimately, you can think of our project as trying to figure out how to pull the best properties of all kinds of different tools to ultimately make better models and forecasts,” Kirtman said. “In addition to testing the benefit of combining the models into one forecast, the skill of the individual models will be evaluated against one another.”

Kirtman describes improving prediction on the week 3-4 timescale as a “new frontier.” Past efforts have focused on short-term weather forecasts and seasonal outlooks, but new research showing potential predictability for this time scale, as well as public demand, has focused attention on this problem. Advances in this area could substantially help NOAA better prepare decision makers and managers for hazards like heat waves, cold spells, and heavy rain.

NOAA’s forecasters at CPC have already begun experimentally using SubX’s multi-model reforecasts and real-time forecasts, and the potential benefits are clear. “The fact that SubX is providing us additional models to look at gives us a good chance of observing things in the models that may not have appeared in the smaller group of models or a single model,” said Dan Collins, researcher and forecaster at CPC. “This [dataset] also provides a better capability to really examine these models in an equal comparison and understand where they are skillful and where they are not.”

Rigorous evaluation of forecast skill over the next year will allow CPC to determine whether the SubX system, or any of its individual models, should become operational.

The SubX project is supported by NOAA’s OAR Modeling, Analysis, Predictions, and Projections Program, and a partnership including NWS/STI, Navy and NASA. SubX dataset is accessible to the external community through a public archive at Columbia University’s International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI) Data Library: http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu/SOURCES/.Models/.SubX/.

For more information about the SubX project, visit http://cola.gmu.edu/kpegion/subx/.