Severe Weather Forecasting Demonstration Project (SWFDP) Peter Chen Chief, Data-Processing and Forecasting System Division Weather and Disaster Risk Reduction Services Department THORPEX Africa Meeting Geneva 8 –

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Transcript Severe Weather Forecasting Demonstration Project (SWFDP) Peter Chen Chief, Data-Processing and Forecasting System Division Weather and Disaster Risk Reduction Services Department THORPEX Africa Meeting Geneva 8 –

Severe Weather Forecasting
Demonstration Project (SWFDP)
Peter Chen
Chief, Data-Processing and Forecasting System Division
Weather and Disaster Risk Reduction Services Department
THORPEX Africa Meeting
Geneva
8 – 10 May 2012
Numerical simulations of the atmosphere
“In general, the public is not aware that our daily
weather forecasts start out as initial value
problems on the major national weather services
supercomputers. Numerical weather prediction
provides the basic guidance for weather
forecasting beyond the first few hours.”
- Eugenia Kalnay (2003)
-
From: “Atmospheric Modeling, Data Assimilation and predictability”
Cambridge University Press, 2003, 5th printing 2009
WMO
Severe Weather Forecasting
Demonstration Project (SWFDP)
Vision for improving severe weather forecasting and
warning services in developing countries (Cg-XV, 2007)
“NMHSs in developing countries are able to implement and maintain reliable and
effective routine forecasting and severe weather warning programmes through
enhanced use of NWP products and delivery of timely and authoritative forecasts
and early warnings, thereby contributing to reducing the risk of disasters from
natural hazards.”
WMO Strategic Thrusts
Improved Service Quality and Service Delivery
 Improved delivery and access to high quality weather, water, related
environmental predictions, information, and services
 Reduced risks and potential impacts of hazards
Strengthening Capacity Building
WMO
Severe Weather Forecasting Demonstration
Project (SWFDP)
SWFDP Main Goals
 Improve Severe Weather Forecasting
 Improve lead-time of warnings
 Improve interaction of NMHSs with users: media, disaster management, civil
protection authorities, various socio-economic sectors (e.g. agriculture, fisheries,
etc.)
“SWFDP provides a practical and beneficial platform for
preparation and dissemination of multi-hazard, early warnings”
SWFDP Regional Subprojects
 Southern Africa (ongoing; 16 countries; RSMC Pretoria)
 South Pacific Islands (ongoing; 9 Island States; RSMC Wellington)
 Eastern Africa (in development, 6 countries; planned start-up 2011)
 Southeast Asia (in development, 4 countries)
 Bay of Bengal (in development, 6 countries)
SWFDP Cascading Forecasting Process
Global NWP centres to provide available NWP and EPS products, including in the form of
probabilities, cut to the project window frame;
Regional centres to interpret information received from global NWP centres, prepare daily
guidance products (out to day-5) for NMCs, run limited-area model to refine products,
maintain RSMC Web site, liaise with the participating NMCs;
National Met. Centres maintain responsibility/authority over national warning services,
issue alerts, advisories, severe weather warnings; liaise with Disaster Management,
and contribute feedback and evaluation of the project
Global Centers
5
RSMC Pretoria
NMCs
Disaster
Management
Centres
SWFDP – Southern Africa
•16 countries, RSMC Pretoria, RSMC La Réunion,
•Met Office UK, NCEP USA, ECMWF
Since 2006
6
SWFDP – Eastern Africa
WMO
• 6 Countries
• RSMC Nairobi & Regional Forecast Support Centre Dar-esSalaam (Lake Victoria region)
 Hazards:
 Strong winds
 Heavy precipitation
 Hazardous waves
(Indian Ocean and Lake Victoria)
 Users: general public, disaster management,
media, agriculture and fisheries
 Domains:
 5E – 55E; 30N – 25S
(for monitoring, analyzing, predicting and verifying
the various severe weather events)
 31E – 36E; 2N – 4S
(for the Lake Victoria)
 Global Centres: ECMWF, UKMO, NCEP
 Regional Centre: RSMC Nairobi, supported by
TMA, UKMO and DWD
 National Met. Centres of: Kenya, Tanzania,
Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, Ethiopia
Started Sept. 2011
SWFDP links and synergies
Flash Flood
Guidance
HWR
AgM, MMO,
AeM, etc.
Tailored Forecasting
Products for Specialized
Applications
WMO SP
GDPFS
Research Projects
Satellite Imagery
and Tools
E-mail; etc.
Media
SMS; Weather Radio
Systems; Public Web; etc.
Radio; TV
Specific Communication
Systems
General Public
and spec. users
(Agriculture,
Fisheries,
Marine Safety,
Aviation, etc.)
Specific Comm. Systems
Disaster
Management
and Civil
Protection
TC
(Forecast D / D+5; Bulletins)
Guidance
Products
(risk/probability)
National Met Centres
Regional Centre
RSMCs-TC
Global NWP/EPS and
Sat-based products
WWRP
Global Centres
PWS
SWFDP – what have we learned?
• Factors for success / failures
– Credible, reliable, useful warning services
– Engagement of forecasters using new NWP/EPS tools
– Feedback, reporting, case studies
– Continuous cycle improvement, including R&D outputs
• Project management (accountability)
– Steering by CBS
– Accountability of participants (project management team)
– Sustaining the « demonstration » of matured projects
– Regional ownership (SADC/MASA, EAC), project leaders
• Service Delivery and Capacity Building (strategic thrusts)
– Concrete results are hard to achieve, or measure
– Relations with disaster management, civil protection, media
organizations
– Visibility of NMHSs
SWFDP – improving forecasts and warnings
• Establish a warnings programme at the NMHSs
• Increase lead-time and confidence in warnings and alerts issued
• Address high-impacts (flash-flooding, wind damage, near-shore
damaging waves), and applications (e.g. AgMet)
• Verification
• Phase in other developments
• Forecasting gaps:
– Tropical convection, rapid on-set, localized events
– Lack of forecasting tools in the very-short-range (< 12h)
– Little or no radar coverage, few real-time observations
• Warning services gaps:
–
–
–
–
Relations disaster management, civil protection, media
Warning criteria, SoP, reach, cultural, quality assurance
Inadequate monitoring, verification
Overall managment of warnings programme
SWFDP – Cooperating with Research
… incorporating promising research outputs into real-time
SWFDP demonstrations …
SWFDP and WWRP
• Global Interactive Forecasting System (TIGGE) - Tropical
Cyclone forecasting, heavy rain, week-2 predictability
• JWG on Forecast Verification Research
• WG Nowcasting Research – very short-range forecasting
(< 12h)
• SERA – Service Delivery
SWFDP – paving the way for the future
“ … next decade will continue to bring improvements,
especially in …
detailed short-range forecasts, using storm-scale models
able to provide skillful predictions of severe weather;
…
“… improvement in the usefulness of medium-range
forecasts, especially through use of ensemble
forecasting;”
- Eugenia Kalnay (2009)
Tell us how to fish
Show us how to fish
Fish with us
Thank you!
[email protected]