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« Improvement of ensemble streamflow predictions over France of the SAFRAN-ISBA-MODCOU model »

Guillaume Thirel (CNRM-GAME/GMME/MOSAYC) ‏ PhD Director : Éric Martin Jury : President : Serge Chauzy (LA) ‏ Reviewer : Vincent Fortin (Environment Canada) ‏ Reviewer : Vazken Andréassian (CEMAGREF) ‏ Examiner : Olivier Thual (CERFACS) ‏ Examiner : Pierre Ribstein (UMR Sisyphe) ‏.

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« Improvement of ensemble streamflow predictions over France of the SAFRAN-ISBA-MODCOU model »

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  1. Guillaume Thirel (CNRM-GAME/GMME/MOSAYC)‏ PhD Director : Éric Martin Jury : President : Serge Chauzy (LA)‏ Reviewer : Vincent Fortin (Environment Canada)‏ Reviewer : Vazken Andréassian (CEMAGREF)‏ Examiner : Olivier Thual (CERFACS)‏ Examiner : Pierre Ribstein (UMR Sisyphe)‏ « Improvement of ensemble streamflow predictions over France of the SAFRAN-ISBA-MODCOU model »

  2. Context Floods = major environmental hazard Damages on infrastructures, huge costs, human beings losses ⇒ Need to better anticipate these events • Organisms (SCHAPI, Services de Prévision des Crues) • Hydrological models • Meteorological forecasts Flood of the Garonne river at Toulouse in 1875

  3. Context Ensemble meteorological forecasts Meteorological forecasts Post-treatment Hydrological model(s) Forecasted discharges Discharges calibration Initial states Data assimilation (from Schaake et al., 2007) Surface observations (snow, discharges, …)

  4. The SIM hydro-meteorological model Meteorological analysis SAFRAN Observations + NWP outputs Precipitation, température, humidity, wind, radiations Distributed model Coherent simulation of water and energy fluxes on : • Atmosphere • Surface/vegetation/surface soil • Surface and sub-surface hydrology E Surface scheme H ISBA + G Snow Physiographic data pour the soil and the vegetation Qr Qi Daily discharges Hydrological model MODCOU Aquifer Grid mesh : 8x8 km → Co-operation Mines Paris Tech /SISYPHE

  5. Validations and valorisation of SIM • Validation of the simulations by meteorological and hydrological variables • Snow • River discharges and aquifer levels Main applications : • Follow-up of soil hydric states, effective rainfall, snow conditions • Impact of climate change • Flood prediction (soil wetness, discharges)‏ Soil Water Index on 16/11/2009 Direction de la climatologie

  6. Application of SIM to ensemble streamflow predictions Since 2004, everyday : ensemble discharge forecasts based on SIM (FabienneRousset-Regimbeau PhD, 2007). Based on the ECMWF EPS (precipitation+temperature)‏ On the whole France, mid-term range (10 days)‏ Statistical analysis of precipitations and discharges Article Rousset, ECMWF newsletter spring 2007 Disaggregation of precipitations on a simple, but efficient way Discharges compared to a reference SIM simulation Study case on a few recent floods

  7. Scheme of the ensemble discharge forecast system based on SIM ENSEMBLE PREDICTIONS ECMWF/PEARP EPSs 51/11 members, 10/2.5 days forecasts Spatial DISAGGREGATION T + Precipitations ENSEMBLE FORECASTS SOIL ISBA MODCOU AQUIFERS RIVERS SIM ANALYSIS (daily)‏ Observations + Meteorological models 10-year Climatology Wind, Rad., Humidity SAFRAN SOIL AQUIFERS RIVERS SOIL AQUIFERS RIVERS ISBA MODCOU

  8. The Seine at Paris, March 2001 flood (decade flood)‏ Q90 Q50 Q10 PhD Fabienne Rousset-Regimbeau

  9. Objectives To improve the ensemble discharge forecast system To explore the contribution of 2 EPSs To test an improvement of the model Qualify the chain in comparison with discharge observations How : By comparing the impact of 2 EPSs on 2-day ensemble discharge forecasts By improving the system with a past discharge assimilation system

  10. Plan I Study : comparison of the impact of 2 EPSs in the SIM-based ensemble discharge forecast system II Past discharges assimilation 1) Justification 2) Choice of the method 3) Validation of the data assimilation system III Impact of the past discharges assimilation system on the ensemble discharges forecasts IV General conclusions and perspectives

  11. Plan I Study : comparison of the impact of 2 EPSs in the SIM-based ensemble discharge forecast system II Past discharges assimilation 1) Justification 2) Choice of the method 3) Validation of the data assimilation system III Impact of the past discharges assimilation system on the ensemble discharges forecasts IV General conclusions and perspectives

  12. The 2 used EPSs ECMWF EPS 51 members 10-day forecasts Singular vectors, Optimisation in 48H Resolution in our operational database : 1.5º PEARP EPS 11 members 2.5-day forecasts Singular vectors Optimisation in 12H Resolution in our operational database : 0.25° -> Objective : mid-term range -> Objectif : short-term range The comparison is done on the first 48H common to both systems

  13. Precipitations disaggregation Interpolation on the SAFRAN zones according to distance, then : • ECMWF EPS : altitudinal gradient • PEARP EPS : correction of the mean bias point by point Precipitation amounts 11 March 2005 / 30 September 2006 SAFRAN PEARP EPS (Day 1)‏ ECMWF EPS (Day 1)‏ All the statistical scores were better for the PEARP EPS

  14. Conclusions on the comparison The ensemble discharges forecasts based on the PEARP EPS showed an improvement on small basins and for floods Results confirmed by a set of statistical scores (RPSS, reliability diagram, False Alarm Rate and Probability of Detection, seasonal study)‏ Low spread, reference used = SIM simulation Interest for flood forecasting at a short-term range in France (SCHAPI)‏ Details of the study in On the impacts of short-range meteorological forecasts for ensemble streamflow predictions, G. Thirel, F. Rousset-Regimbeau, E. Martin, F. Habets, Journal of Hydrometeorology, 2008.

  15. Plan I Study : comparison of the impact of 2 EPSs in the SIM-based ensemble discharge forecast system II Past discharges assimilation 1) Justification 2) Choice of the method 3) Validation of the data assimilation system III Impact of the past discharges assimilation system on the ensemble discharges forecasts IV General conclusions and perspectives

  16. Justification Choice of the observations : Snow : concerns only a limited part of the territory and discharges are influenced Aquifer layers : many data but only few aquifers simulated into SIM River discharges : many data over all of France available daily Choice of the variable to modify : River water content : efficient for the short-term range, less for the mid-term range Soil water content : concerns the whole territory, impact until the mid-term

  17. Strategy 186 stations assimilated over France Low human influence Good quality of observations (Banque Hydro) Good quality of SIM simulations Principle : to use observed discharges to improve the discharges simulations, by adjusting the ISBA soil moisture

  18. Plan I Study : comparison of the impact of 2 EPSs in the SIM-based ensemble discharge forecast system II Past discharges assimilation 1) Justification 2) Choice of the method 3) Validation of the data assimilation system III Impact of the past discharges assimilation system on the ensemble discharges forecasts IV General conclusions and perspectives

  19. The BLUE (Best Linear Unbiased Estimator) • Choice of the BLUE because : • Low dimensions of the problem • Possibility to compute the solution in its matricial form Hypothesis : unbiased errors and linear model Observed discharges Analysed state Background state Innovation vector

  20. Determination of the K matrix components To estimate the observations (R) and background covariance errors (B) matrices and calibrate these two matrices between them To define the state variable : the ISBA soil moisture, but which one? To estimate the Jacobian matrix H Discharges Soil moisture

  21. ISBA physics • Runoff : • Dunne • Subgrid depending on the fraction of the mesh saturated • Drainage : • gravitational • subgrid • Improvement of the hydrological transfers in the soil (Decharme et al., 2006; Quintana Seguí et al., 2009) Discharges : coming from ISBA runoff and drainage

  22. State variable 3 possible choices : Soil water content : w2+w3 (runoff + drainage)‏ Root zone water content : w2 (runoff)‏ 2 soil layers water contents separately : (w2,w3)‏ (runoff and drainage)‏ Spatial aggregation (sum of the soil water contents over each sub-basin)

  23. Sensitivity of the Jacobian Perturbation of 1% : the Jacobian varies according to the sign Perturbation of 0.1% : low modification according to the sign Thus, we chose to apply a perturbation of +0.1% -> respect of the linearity Clear temporal evolution : the Jacobian will be re-calculated for each assimilation

  24. Filling of the Jacobian matrix discharges Jacobian H : Soil moisture stations 3 gauging stations y1, y2 and y3. x1, x2 and x3 soil water contents summed on the sub-basins 0 0 0 0 Finite differences sub-basins

  25. Principle of the assimilation system

  26. Implementation of the assimilation system PALM coupler (CERFACS) : dynamical coupler dynamique of parallel calculation codes, many applications (data assimilation, coupling)‏ Friendly interface, modular software Intuitive gestion of data exchanges, buffer storage -> few modifications of the ISBA and MODCOU codes Simple cluster coupling Use of the Météo-France super-computer

  27. Plan I Study : comparison of the impact of 2 EPSs in the SIM-based ensemble discharge forecast system II Past discharges assimilation 1) Justification 2) Choice of the method 3) Validation of the data assimilation system III Impact of the past discharges assimilation system on the ensemble discharges forecasts IV General conclusions and perspectives

  28. Assimilation of real observations Period : 10 March 2005 / 30 September 2006 186 assimilated stations 6 experiments : 3 state variables * 2 physics of the model Daily assimilation, daily observations

  29. The Doubs river at Besançon -> experiment (modification of the layers 2 and 3 soil moistures + improved physics)

  30. Scores for 148 assimilated stations Scores for 49 independent stations combines the best Nash and RMSE scores, as well as the lowest increments (soil moisture + improved physics) will be kept

  31. Conclusion on the discharges assimilation system Observed discharges assimilated for the first time in SIM Positive impact of the use of PALM : CPU time save (parallel computation on the Météo-France super-computer), modularity Validation of the assimilation system System validated on SIM-analysis Assimilation of real observations : several configurations tested, significative improvement of the scores, low increments Article in preparation For initializing the ensemble discharges forecasts, we will keep : State variable : mean of the soil moisture into the 2 ISBA layers The assimilated states (assimilation + improved physics) daily

  32. Perspectives of improvement of the assimilation system Improvement of the background and observations errors Reduction of the number of sub-basins in a sub-basin Less simulations needed for computing H Tests of other assimilation methods External loop? (i.e. re-calculating the Jacobian around the analysed state until it converges) -> tests showed low improvements EnKF?

  33. Plan I Study : comparison of the impact of 2 EPSs in the SIM-based ensemble discharge forecast system II Past discharges assimilation 1) Justification 2) Choice of the method 3) Validation of the data assimilation system III Impact of the past discharges assimilation system on the ensemble discharges forecasts IV General conclusions and perspectives

  34. Conditions of the study Studied period : 11 March 2005 – 30 September 2006 Scores on 148 assimilated stations Use of the 10-day ECMWF EPS 3 systems of ensemble discharges forecasts were compared : The real-time system A re-forecast initialized by the initial states (modification of the soil moisture of both layers, without the improved physics)‏ A re-forecast initialized by the initial states (modification of the soil moisture of both layers, with the improved physics)‏

  35. Some statistical scores Spread

  36. RMSE Scores computed in comparison with observations

  37. Brier Skill Score day 1 Perfect model Clima- tology

  38. Brier Skill Score day 10 Perfect model Clima- tology

  39. Conclusion on the impact of the assimilation Intrinsic characteristics of the ensemble discharges few modified (spread)‏ Significative impact of the assimilation for the first days, less important then Then, the physics improvement improves the forecast quality Use of the forecasts by the forecasts eased (False Alarm Rates, POD)‏  Article in preparation SIM-PEARP less impacted than SIM-ECMWF, scores very close

  40. Plan I Study : comparison of the impact of 2 EPSs in the SIM-based ensemble discharge forecast system II Past discharges assimilation 1) Justification 2) Choice of the method 3) Validation of the data assimilation system III Impact of the past discharges assimilation system on the ensemble discharges forecasts IV General conclusions and perspectives

  41. General conclusions and perspectives Two ensemble discharges forecasts systems based on SIM Impact of the PEARP EPS at a short-range, on small basins and for floods A past discharge assimilation system implemented in SIM Validation : significative impact on SIM-analysis Low non-linearities Impact on the ensemble discharges Strong impact of the assimilation system at a short-range, then low impact But the improvement of the physics allows better forecasts at a mid-term range

  42. Perspectives Implementation of the assimilation system for initializing the operational SIM-ECMWF chain in real-time Adding aquifer layers in SIM, and then assimilation of aquifer levels (PhD UMR SISYPHE Alexandra Stouls)‏ Improvement of the meteorological uncertainty taking into account (EPS disaggregation) Taking into account of uncertainties linked to hydrology : into the initialization and via a stochastic physics or a multi-model forecast Seasonal forecasts with SIM (PhD CNRM Stéphanie Singla)

  43. My work here on EFAS • Use of satellital snow data for improving the proxy • Particule filter and EnKF • Study of its impact on the EFAS forecasts • Probabilistic statistical scores • 2nd step : to see how to use other sources of rainfall data in order to improve the proxy

  44. Thank you for your attention!

  45. Visualisation des sorties en temps réel • Site intramet : http://intra.cnrm.meteo.fr/pedeb/ • Sélection d’environ 100 stations • prévision de débits • tableau d’alerte • => Visualisation du risque + de la persistance (ou non) de la prévision Probabilité de dépassement du seuil d’alerte

  46. BSS hauts débits (Q90)‏ Bleu : CEPMMT meilleur (90% de certitude selon un test de ré-échantillonnage)‏ Rouge : PEARP meilleur (90% de certitude)‏ CEPMMT : 49 stations PEARP : 338 stations CEPMMT : 19 stations PEARP : 486 stations Jour 2 Jour 1

  47. Distribution par taille de bassin (BSS)‏ Q10 Jour 1 Q90 Jour 1 CEPMMT PEARP Tailles des bassins Tailles des bassins Q10 Jour 2 Q90 Jour 2 Tailles des bassins Tailles des bassins

  48. Variance d’erreur d’observations Erreurs des mesures des stations indépendantes : matrice diagonale Tests sur des cas synthétiques : 2e méthode meilleure (Nash) et donc retenue

  49. Répartition spatiale de la variance d’erreur d’ébauche B et R diagonales B estimée en perturbant l’analyse météorologique SAFRAN, puis comparaison de l’humidité obtenue avec l’humidité de référence R estimée selon les débits observés R et B calibrées grâce à un unique coefficient Moyenne pondérée des 2 couches Couche 3 uniquement Couche 2 uniquement

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