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Title: Andy%20Wood,%20Alan%20Hamlet%20and%20Dennis%20P.%20Lettenmaier


1
A west-wide seasonal to interannual hydrologic
forecast system
Andy Wood, Alan Hamlet and Dennis P.
Lettenmaier University of Washington
  • A retrospective forecast skill analysis for the
    NCEP seasonal forecasts over the entire western
    U.S. domain was undertaken to ascertain the value
    of the climate model forecasts, relative to the
    ESP forecast and climatological forecasts
    baselines. In general, the GSM retrospective
    forecasts did not improve upon the skill of the
    ESP streamflow forecasts however, in years when
    strong ENSO anomalies were present in the
    forecast initiation month, the GSM-based
    forecasts yielded skill increases in California
    and the Columbia River basin, but lower forecast
    skill (relative to ESP) in the Colorado and the
    upper Rio Grande River basins.
  • We have implemented the Variable Infiltration
    Capacity (VIC) macroscale hydrology model over
    the western U.S. at 1/8 degree spatial resolution
    for experimental ensemble hydrologic prediction
    at lead times up to six months.
  • We have implemented the Variable Infiltration
    Capacity (VIC) macroscale Climate forecast
    ensembles are presently taken from the NCEP
    Global Spectral Model (GSM) and the NASA NSIPP
    model, and will eventually be expanded to
    incorporate more models in a multi-model
    ensemble.
  • As a benchmark, we also use the VIC model to
    produce parallel forecasts via the well-known
    Extended Streamflow Prediction (ESP) method. The
    ESP forecasts are further composited to provide
    ENSO and PDO conditioned ensembles, which past
    work has shown can considerably reduce seasonal
    forecast error variance.

Retrospective skill assessment for forecasts of
basin averages of hydrologic and climate variables
NOTE Skill Score 1 - RMSE(GSM) /
RMSE(baseline) where baseline is either
CLIM unconditional climatology ESP
ESP-derived forecast
Shown below are the skill scores for GSM-based
forecasts over 1979-1999, relative to two
forecast baselines (CLIM and ESP), for all years
(top 2 sets) and for a strong ENSO composite
(abs(Nino 3.4) gt 1).
GSM wrt CLIM
GSM wrt ESP
Strong ENSO Composite GSM wrt ESP
January Forecast
Models
NCEP GSM forecasts
VIC Hydrologic Model (Liang et al., 1994)
  • T62 (1.9 degree) resolution
  • 6 month forecast duration
  • each month, ensemble product has
  • 20 forecast members
  • 210 rolling climatology members (derived from 10
    initial atmos. condition perturbations for each
    year of a 21 year climatology period)
  • we use monthly total precip average temperature

NSIPP forecasts
October Forecast
  • 2 x 2.5 degree (lat x lon) resolution
  • 7 month forecast duration
  • 9-member forecast ensembles
  • fixed 50 year climatology based on 9 continous
    AMIP runs

numbered locations were used for retrospective
streamflow forecasting analysis (results not
shown)
(April and July forecasts not shown also,
streamflow forecasts not shown)
  • Our initial model domain is the Pacific
    Northwest. Initial testing in real-time began
    with bi-monthly updates starting at the end of
    December, 2002, and ran through April 2003.
  • Upgrades to the modeling system during the test
    period included a) the development of a simple
    method for assimilating snow water equivalent
    observations at the start of the forecast, and b)
    a modification of the surface forcing estimation
    immediately prior to the forecast start using a
    set of real-time index stations in lieu of the
    Land Data Assimilation System (LDAS) real-time
    forcings.
  • We also describe the development of a set of
    reservoir system models for the western U.S., and
    their implementation within the system to produce
    ensemble forecasts of reservoir system storages,
    operations and releases.

Real-time Hydrologic Forecasting for Columbia
River Basin in Winter 2003
Forecast Approach upgrades
Reservoir system forecasts
Use of real-time SWE observations (right) (from
the 600 station USDA/NRCS SNOTEL network and
several ASP stations in BC, Canada, run by
Environment Canada) to adjust snow state at the
forecast start date (left) (spin-up met. data
improvements method not shown)
6-Month Ensemble Forecasts of System Storage for
the Columbia River Basin Using VIC Streamflow
Forecasts and the ColSim Reservoir Model
Initialized by Observed Reservoir Elevations (
Feb 1, 2001)
Initial hydrologic condition estimates
Streamflow hydrograph forecasts (example from
February 1)
Ongoing Work
blue/red are storage boundaries green is ensemble
mean thick red is historical average black init.
cond. with normal climate
  • implementing remainder of western U.S. domain
    with real-time forecasts to recommence in Sept.
  • working on alternative spin-up meteorology
    approaches
  • expanding products to include spatial fields
    (snow, soil moisture), wider reservoir system
    coverage
  • improving web site (http//www.ce.washington.edu/p
    ub/HYDRO/aww/w_fcst/w_fcst.htm)
  • developing a downscaling approach for official
    forecasts from NCEP and other centers
  • pursuing linkages to NRCS and NWS streamflow
    forecasting operations groups

Streamflow volume forecast comparison with NRCS
official forecasts
References
Wood, A.W., E.P. Maurer, A. Kumar and D.P.
Lettenmaier, 2002. Long Range Experimental
Hydrologic Forecasting for the Eastern U.S., J.
Geophys. Res., 107(D20). Liang, X., D. P.
Lettenmaier, E. F. Wood, and S. J. Burges, A
Simple hydrologically Based Model of Land Surface
Water and Energy Fluxes for GSMs, J. Geophys.
Res., 99(D7), 14,415-14,428, 1994.
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