Improved trend-aware post-processing of GCM seasonal precipitation forecasts

Abstract Climate trends have been observed over the recent decades in many parts of the world, but current global climate models (GCMs) for seasonal climate forecasting often fail to capture these trends. As a result, model forecasts may be biased above or below the trendline. In our previous research, we developed a trend-aware forecast post-processing method to overcome this problem. The method was demonstrated to be effective for embedding observed trends into seasonal temperature forecasts. In this study, we further develop the method for post-processing GCM seasonal precipitation forecasts. We introduce new formulation and evaluation features to cater for special characteristics of precipitation amounts, such as having a zero lower bound and highly positive skewness. We apply the improved method to calibrate ECMWF SEAS5 forecasts of seasonal precipitation for Australia. Our evaluation shows that the calibrated forecasts reproduce observed trends over the hindcast period of 36 years. In some regions where observed trends are statistically significant, forecast skill is greatly improved by embedding trends into the forecasts. In most regions, the calibrated forecasts outperform the raw forecasts in terms of bias, skill, and reliability. Wider applications of the new trend-aware post-processing method are expected to boost user confidence in seasonal precipitation forecasts.

2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (15) ◽  
pp. 6249-6266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Kerkhoff ◽  
Hans R. Künsch ◽  
Christoph Schär

Abstract A Bayesian hierarchical model for heterogeneous multimodel ensembles of global and regional climate models is presented. By applying the methodology herein to regional and seasonal temperature averages from the ENSEMBLES project, probabilistic projections of future climate are derived. Intermodel correlations that are particularly strong between regional climate models and their driving global climate models are explicitly accounted for. Instead of working with time slices, a data archive is investigated in a transient setting. This enables a coherent treatment of internal variability on multidecadal time scales. Results are presented for four European regions to highlight the feasibility of the approach. In particular, the methodology is able to objectively identify patterns of variability changes, in ways that previously required subjective expert knowledge. Furthermore, this study underlines that assumptions about bias changes have an effect on the projected warming. It is also shown that validating the out-of-sample predictive performance is possible on short-term prediction horizons and that the hierarchical model herein is competitive. Additionally, the findings indicate that instead of running a large suite of regional climate models all forced by the same driver, priority should be given to a rich diversity of global climate models that force a number of regional climate models in the experimental design of future multimodel ensembles.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Schepen ◽  
Tongtiegang Zhao ◽  
Quan J. Wang ◽  
David E. Robertson

Abstract. Rainfall forecasts are an integral part of hydrological forecasting systems at sub-seasonal to seasonal time scales. In seasonal forecasting, global climate models (GCMs) are now the go-to source for rainfall forecasts. However, for hydrological applications, GCM forecasts are often biased and unreliable in uncertainty spread, and therefore calibration is required before use. There are sophisticated statistical techniques for calibrating monthly and seasonal aggregations of the forecasts. However, calibration of seasonal forecasts at the daily time step typically uses very simple statistical methods or climate analogue methods. These methods generally lack the sophistication to achieve unbiased, reliable and coherent forecasts of daily amounts and seasonal accumulated totals. In this study, we propose and evaluate a Rainfall Post-Processing method for Seasonal forecasts (RPP-S) based on the Bayesian joint probability approach for calibrating daily forecasts and the Schaake Shuffle approach for connecting the daily ensemble members of different lead times. We apply the method to post-process ACCESS-S forecasts for 12 perennial and ephemeral catchments across Australia and for 12 initialisation dates. RPP-S significantly reduces bias in raw forecasts and improves both skill and reliability. RPP-S forecasts are more skilful and reliable than forecasts derived from ACCESS-S forecasts that have been post-processed using quantile mapping, especially for monthly and seasonal accumulations. Several opportunities to improve the robustness and skill of RPP-S are identified. The new RPP-S post-processed forecasts will be used in ensemble sub-seasonal to seasonal streamflow applications.


Author(s):  
Yawen Shao ◽  
Quan J. Wang ◽  
Andrew Schepen ◽  
Dongryeol Ryu

AbstractFor managing climate variability and adapting to climate change, seasonal forecasts are widely produced to inform decision making. However, seasonal forecasts from global climate models are found to poorly reproduce temperature trends in observations. Furthermore, this problem is not addressed by existing forecast post-processing methods that are needed to remedy biases and uncertainties in model forecasts. The inability of the forecasts to reproduce the trends severely undermines user confidence in the forecasts. In our previous work, we proposed a new statistical post-processing model that counteracted departures in trends of model forecasts from observations. Here, we further extend this trend-aware forecast post-processing methodology to carefully treat the trend uncertainty associated with the sampling variability due to limited data records. This new methodology is validated on forecasting seasonal averages of daily maximum and minimum temperatures for Australia based on the SEAS5 climate model of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. The resulting post-processed forecasts are shown to have proper trends embedded, leading to greater accuracy in regions with significant trends. The application of this new forecast post-processing is expected to boost user confidence in seasonal climate forecasts.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 1615-1628 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Schepen ◽  
Tongtiegang Zhao ◽  
Quan J. Wang ◽  
David E. Robertson

Abstract. Rainfall forecasts are an integral part of hydrological forecasting systems at sub-seasonal to seasonal timescales. In seasonal forecasting, global climate models (GCMs) are now the go-to source for rainfall forecasts. For hydrological applications however, GCM forecasts are often biased and unreliable in uncertainty spread, and calibration is therefore required before use. There are sophisticated statistical techniques for calibrating monthly and seasonal aggregations of the forecasts. However, calibration of seasonal forecasts at the daily time step typically uses very simple statistical methods or climate analogue methods. These methods generally lack the sophistication to achieve unbiased, reliable and coherent forecasts of daily amounts and seasonal accumulated totals. In this study, we propose and evaluate a Rainfall Post-Processing method for Seasonal forecasts (RPP-S), which is based on the Bayesian joint probability modelling approach for calibrating daily forecasts and the Schaake Shuffle for connecting the daily ensemble members of different lead times. We apply the method to post-process ACCESS-S forecasts for 12 perennial and ephemeral catchments across Australia and for 12 initialisation dates. RPP-S significantly reduces bias in raw forecasts and improves both skill and reliability. RPP-S forecasts are also more skilful and reliable than forecasts derived from ACCESS-S forecasts that have been post-processed using quantile mapping, especially for monthly and seasonal accumulations. Several opportunities to improve the robustness and skill of RPP-S are identified. The new RPP-S post-processed forecasts will be used in ensemble sub-seasonal to seasonal streamflow applications.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Diallo ◽  
M. B. Sylla ◽  
F. Giorgi ◽  
A. T. Gaye ◽  
M. Camara

Reliable climate change scenarios are critical for West Africa, whose economy relies mostly on agriculture and, in this regard, multimodel ensembles are believed to provide the most robust climate change information. Toward this end, we analyze and intercompare the performance of a set of four regional climate models (RCMs) driven by two global climate models (GCMs) (for a total of 4 different GCM-RCM pairs) in simulating present day and future climate over West Africa. The results show that the individual RCM members as well as their ensemble employing the same driving fields exhibit different biases and show mixed results in terms of outperforming the GCM simulation of seasonal temperature and precipitation, indicating a substantial sensitivity of RCMs to regional and local processes. These biases are reduced and GCM simulations improved upon by averaging all four RCM simulations, suggesting that multi-model RCM ensembles based on different driving GCMs help to compensate systematic errors from both the nested and the driving models. This confirms the importance of the multi-model approach for improving robustness of climate change projections. Illustrative examples of such ensemble reveal that the western Sahel undergoes substantial drying in future climate projections mostly due to a decrease in peak monsoon rainfall.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrico Scoccimarro ◽  
Silvio Gualdi ◽  
Antonella Sanna ◽  
Edoardo Bucchignani ◽  
Myriam Montesarchio

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