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NCEP Climate Activities Based on a Service-Science Linkage. “Where America’s Climate and Weather Services Begin”. Louis W. Uccellini Director, NCEP GAPP PIs Meeting Boulder, CO August 30, 2004. Outline. NCEP Overview Climate Mission Climate Support Environmental Modeling Center
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NCEP Climate ActivitiesBased on a Service-Science Linkage “Where America’s Climate and Weather Services Begin” Louis W. Uccellini Director, NCEP GAPP PIs Meeting Boulder, CO August 30, 2004
Outline • NCEP Overview • Climate Mission • Climate Support • Environmental Modeling Center • Computer Resources • Climate Forecast System • Reanalysis • Climate Test Bed • Future Opportunities
NCEP Mission Statement NCEP delivers analyses, guidance, forecasts and warnings for weather, ocean, climate, water, land surface and space weather to the nation and the world. NCEP provides science-based products and services through collaboration with partners and users to protect life and property, enhance the nation’s economy and support the nation’s growing need for environmental information. NCEP Central Operations Climate Prediction Center Environmental Modeling Center Hydrometeorological Prediction Center Ocean Prediction Center NCEP Strategic Vision Striving to be America’s first choice, first alert and preferred partner for climate, weather and ocean prediction services. Aviation Weather Center Space Environment Center Tropical Prediction Center Storm Prediction Center
Climate Mission “CPC serves the public by assessing and forecasting the impacts of short-term climate variability, emphasizing enhanced risks of weather-related extreme events, for use in mitigating losses and maximizing economic gains.” • Focus is on SI to decadal forecasts • Official products for the U.S. • Forecasts for week 2 and beyond in collaboration with • CDC, HPC, IRI
NCEP Climate Support • Computer resources • Supercomputer - $5M/yr for climate forecasts • Backup Computer -1/3 for climate applications to support Climate Test Bed • EMC organization
NCEP Climate Support (cont.) • NCEP products linked directly to 122 WFOs (regional downscaling) • EMC testing regional climate models for downscaling purposes • Reanalysis – applications to model calibration and other climate studies • Climate Forecast System – fully coupled • Atmosphere – land – ocean • Initialized through GODAS
Reanalysis • Global • T62(~210 km)/28 level, global domain • Used as benchmark to measure model improvement • Waiting on funding;working with NASA/GSFC • Review paper for Climate Change Science Program • Regional • 32 km, 45 layer, domain covers N. and C. America, • Includes precipitation assimilation • Includes most recent Noah land model • Completed 24 years of RR production in just over 3 months • Real-time update now executing • Output available through NCDC
The NCEP coupled Climate Forecast System (implemented August 24, 2004) • Global Forecast System 2003 (GFS03) • T62 in horizontal; 64 layers in vertical • Recent upgrades in model physics • Solar radiation (Hou, 1996) • cumulus convection (Hong and Pan, 1998) • gravity wave drag (Kim and Arakawa, 1995) • cloud water/ice (Zhao and Carr,1997) 1. Atmospheric component 2. Oceanic component • GFDL MOM3 (Pacanowski and Griffies, 1998) • 1/3°x1° in tropics; 1°x1° in extratropics; 40 layers • Quasi-global domain (74°S to 64°N) • Free surface 3. Coupled model • Once-a-day coupling • Sea ice extent taken as observed climatology
Most Recent CFS Latest CPC Forecast: El Nino conditions are expected to develop within the next three months
30 33 C 29 C 32 23 24 16 16 00 12 24 36 48 00 12 24 36 48 OPERATIONAL COUPLED LAND-ATMOSPHERE ETA MODEL (Model captures interannual variability of daytime max temperature and model soil moisture) July 1999 July 2000 Eta model end-of-month 2nd layer volumetric soil moisture relatively dry relatively moist Eta model monthly- mean 2-m (C) air temperature vs obs: interior Southwest obs obs Eta Eta interior Southwest Eta forecast hour Eta forecast hour Figure 6.Upper: Eta model layer 2 (10-40 cm) volumetric soil moisture is relatively moist (dry) in July 1999, left (July 2000, right). Lower: Verification of operational Eta model multi-station,monthly-mean 2-m air temperature for interior Southwest: moister and cooler (warmer and drier) conditions in July 1999, left (July 2000, right) are well-captured.
Most recent upgrade in Noah land model physics: snowpack physics Eliminate early bias in springtime depletion of significant winter snowpack Revised physics of: A) surface evaporation over patchy snow cover B) surface albedo over snow cover Winter 1996-1997 Mean snow water equivalent (SWE) over 110 SNOTEL sites of western CONUS. Control Noah run: green Revised Noah run: yellow Obs (SNOTEL): black From N. American Land Data Assimilation System (NLDAS)
Climate Test Bed • Mission • To accelerate the transition of research and development improvements to NOAA operational climate forecasts • High profile activities • Product generation/test • Model assessment • Reanalysis applications
Climate Test Bed Status • Director (Wayne Higgins of CPC) and Deputy Director (Hua Lu Pan of EMC) named • Resource allocation ongoing (within NCEP) • Additional resources being provided through OGP
Summary • NCEP provides critical operational support to climate-weather product stream • NCEP focus: seasonal-interannual-decadal • Infrastructure support is in place • Computers • Data assimilation (ocean, land and atmosphere) • Coupled global model (atmosphere, land, ocean) • Product generation, product dissemination • Climate Test Bed • Partnerships are critical element of success • OGP, NASA, NCAR, GFDL, CDC, NCDC, COLA and others
Issues/Future Opportunities • Extend ability to provide seasonal prediction (time, space, regime) • THORPEX/IPY (’07/’08): climate/weather linkage • Ecosystem forecasts: enhancing the application of climate predictions