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Section 3 Introduction and Overview of Course. Introduction – Forecasting Programs. The process of developing, operating, and improving an air quality (AQ) forecasting program. Data Collection. Develop a Program. Operate the Program. Need for an AQ Forecast. Forecast Preparation.
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Introduction – Forecasting Programs The process of developing, operating, and improving an air quality (AQ) forecasting program Data Collection Develop a Program Operate the Program Need for an AQ Forecast Forecast Preparation Revise the Program Forecast Communication Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Overview of Course Course Content: • Acknowledgments 2. Executive Overview • Introduction and Overview of Course • What Are We Forecasting? • How Are Forecasts Used? • Health Effects • Chemical Aspects of Air Pollution • Pollutant Monitoring • Pollutant Lifecycles and Trends • Air Pollution Meteorology • Case Studies of Episodes • Air Quality Forecasting Tools • Developing a Forecasting Program • Daily Air Quality Forecast Operations • References Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Audience for Course • Decision makers • Overview of air quality forecasting • General steps to develop/improve an air quality forecasting program • Meteorologists and forecasters • Overview of air quality emissions and chemistry • Discussion of how weather affects air quality • Discussion of tools used to forecast air quality • Air quality scientists • Discussion of how weather affects air quality Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Structure of Course –Objectives This course offers the necessary knowledge to develop, implement, and evaluate a forecasting program. • Understand the meteorological processes that affect pollution concentrations • Learn more about meteorological and air quality forecasting products • Learn how to use and evaluate meteorological forecast data (case studies) • Discuss the tools available for air quality forecasting • Discuss how to develop, operate, and maintain a forecasting program Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Structure of Course – Design Goals • Focus. Forecasting air quality—particulate matter (PM), ozone, other pollutants. • Similarity. Air quality is strongly influenced by weather conditions and emissions sources. Weather conditions and emission types are generally similar, but have minor differences among countries. • Practical. Beyond theory, the course contains practical advice and references to examples, tools, and methods. • Gateway. The course workbook is a gateway to additional resources. • Evolve. The course will improve in time through participants’ feedback. Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Introduction(1 of 3) Forecasting Philosophy • Understand how the system operates • Determine how meteorological processes influence air pollution in an area • Forecast the processes that affect air quality, then predict the air quality • Obtain better results by using multiple forecasting tools • No “silver bullet” • Several tools provide a consensus forecast Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Global Synoptic Mesoscale Urban Neighborhood Introduction(2 of 3) Predicting weather (and air quality) requires examining information for several different spatial and time scales. Global Space: 4,000 km – 20,000 km Time: 1 - 2 weeks Synoptic Space: 400 km – 4,000 km Time: 1 day – 1 week Mesoscale Space: 10 km – 400 km Time: 1 hr – 1 day Urban Space: 5 km - 50 km Time: 1 hr - 4 hr Neighborhood Space: 500 m - 5 km Time: 1 min – 1 hr Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Ozone O3 = low Good AQI Clouds= reduced sunlight Slows photochemistry PM Cold Inversion traps wood-burning emissions PM2.5 = High Unhealthy API Introduction(3 of 3) Forecasting Process Predict weather’s effect on emissions and chemistry Convert to Air Index for the public Estimate AQ concentration Predict weather Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Exercise Tell us about your experience and expectations for the course: • Name • Agency or organization • Your position (job title) • Experience in forecasting air quality • Expectations for the course Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Day-by-Day Guide • Day 1 (Monday) - Morning • 1. Acknowledgements • 2. Executive Overview • 3. Introduction and Overview of Course • 4. What are we forecasting • 4. Exercise: Survey of audience • Break (1045-1100) • 5. How are forecasts used? • 6. Health Effects Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Day-by-Day Guide • Day 1 (Monday) - Afternoon • 7. Chemical Aspects of Air Pollution • Exercise: Make ozone in a bottle • Exercise: Unit conversion (ppb to µg/m3) • Break (1530-1545) • 8. Pollutant Monitoring • Exercise – Identify urban/rural sites from time-series plots more • Lunch 1230-1400 Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Day-by-Day Guide • Day 2 (Tuesday) – Morning • 9. Pollutant Lifecycles and Trends • Exercise: Examine time series • Exercise: IER model of ozone smog • 10. Air Pollution Meteorology • Break 1030-1045 • 10. Air Pollution Meteorology (continued) • Lunch 1230-1400 Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Day-by-Day Guide • Day 2 (Tuesday) – Afternoon • Exercise • Interpreting Radiosondes • Mixing height calculator • Using HYSPLIT • Flowchart • Map Discussion • Break (1545-1600) • 11. Case Study Episodes Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Day-by-Day Guide • Day 3 (Wednesday) – Morning • 11. Case Study Episodes (as needed) • 12. Air Quality Forecasting Tools • Break (1045-1100) • 12. Air Quality Forecasting Tools (continued) Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Day-by-Day Guide • Day 4 (Thursday) • 12a. Madrid Forecast Model • Break (1030-1045) • 12a. Madrid Forecast Model • Lunch (1230-1400) • 12b. Background and setup of TAPM • Questions about forecasting tools/methods Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Day-by-Day Guide • Day 5 (Friday) • 13. Developing a Forecasting Program • Break (1030-1045) • Exercise: Forecast verification. • 14. Daily Weather Forecast Operations • Review of TAPM results • Lunch (1230-1400) • Review of TAPM results (continued) • Analysis of participants data • Questions and individual training Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course
Summary • Define the audience (decision makers, meteorologists, forecasters, and air quality scientists) • Obtain better results by using multiple forecasting tools • Understand how the system operates • Examine spatial and time scales (global, synoptic, mesoscale, urban, and neighborhood) • Develop a forecasting process • Predict weather and its effect on emissions and chemistry • Estimate concentration and convert to an Air Index Section 3 – Introduction and Overview of Course