Title: Operational information
1Operational information
- FAO RFE for Sudan
- FAO Sudan Meteorology Authority
- Mauro Evangelisti Stefano Alessandrini (FAO
Consultant)
2What is FAO-RFE?
- FAO-RFE is a system that collects, stores,
processes several basic data to estimate the
rainfall over an area with limited ground
information - FAO-RFE uses the available ground information for
the day-based local calibration
3RFE-NOAA
ECMWF
Residuals for NDVI computed as a function of (a)
RFE and (b) ECMWF. The residuals can be
interpreted directly as rainfall over- or
underestimations. Areas with less than 200 mm of
average annual rainfall and water bodies have
been masked out (in white).
O. Rojas, F. Rembold, J. Delincé O. Léo (2011)
Using the NDVI as auxiliary data for rapid
quality assessment of rainfall estimates in
Africa, International Journal of Remote Sensing,
3212, 3249-3265
4FAO-RFE general scheme
Infrared meteosat data 3 km resolution
ECMWF rainfall data 25 km resolution
MPE (Eumetsat) Infrared and Microwave Estimation
3km resolution
Humidity and precipitable water profiles from
ECMWF
Interpolation
GOES Index
Daily Rainfall field 3 km resolution
Daily Rainfall field 3 km resolution
Daily Rainfall field 3 km resolution
Weighted linear combination
GTS (gauges) Rainfall data
Validated Rainfall data
Weights determination
Preliminary Combined Rainfall field 3 km
resolution
Local Calibration
Final Merged Rainfall field 3 km resolution
5FAO-RFE products
2010
1 day RFE
2007
Climatology
10D RFE
Real Time Estimate
Reference Maps
Monthly RFE
36 dekads
12 months
6FAO-RFE versions
- FAO-RFE is available at two levels
- continental
- country-based(e.g. Sudan)
7FAO-RFE customization
- Customization works at several levels
- input data
- forecast model
- 00Z or 06Z based
- algorithms
- already existing work flow
- output formats
- user interface
8Difference between FAO RFE (continental product)
and FAO RFE at country level
- At the country level GTS measurements can be used
together with local data - So, at the country level both the global
calibration and the local calibration are
performed only with specific measurements over a
territory with a limited extension. - At the continental level the calibration
processes are performed over a larger area,
including stations far from the country and this
can result in a loss of reliability for a
specific country - At the country level all the power has been given
to the measurements and the RFE daily estimate is
forced to be equal to the measurements at the
gauges locations - At the continental level we have less control
about the quality of the measurements therefore
some rainfall data are rejected (if is to much
different from the RFE estimate) and the local
calibration forces less strongly the RFE estimate
towards the measured data
9Case study SUDAN16 Aug 2007
Local Calibration
Station
10FAO-RFE user interface
- Time Aggregation Selector - Reference Maps
Viewer - Zoom facilities - Point and Click
query - Regular (lat,lon) grids output at
different resolutions in GeoTiff and Idrisi
Raster
11FAO RFE (SUDAN version) 10 days 21-30/06/2011
FAO RFE (continental) 10 days 21-30/06/2011
The estimate done at National level using more
station data leads to a lower rainfall values in
general over Sudan territory The effect is more
evident on a 10 days period
12FAO RFE (continental) Monthly 06/2011
FAO RFE (SUDAN version) Monthly 06/2011
The estimate done at National level using more
station data lead to a lower rainfall values in
general over Sudan territory
13Advantage of FAO-RFE
- The main advantage will be for the country that
will be able to do/manage his own rainfall
estimates - incentive of improvement of network stations
- The country will has the possibility to improve
it when more meteorological stations will be
available - The accuracy should be high when compare with the
methodological approaches that only considerer
the GTS stations.