TY - JOUR
T1 - A Multimodel Real-Time System for Global Probabilistic Subseasonal Forecasts of Precipitation and Temperature
AU - Robertson, Andrew W.
AU - Yuan, Jing
AU - Tippett, Tippett K.
AU - Cousin, Rémi
AU - Hall, Kyle
AU - Acharya, Nachiketa
AU - Singh, Bohar
AU - Ángel, G.
AU - Collins, Dan
AU - Lajoie, Emerson
AU - Infanti, Johnna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - A global multimodel probabilistic subseasonal forecast system for precipitation and near-surface temperature is developed based on three NOAA ensemble prediction systems that make their forecasts available publicly in real time as part of the Subseasonal Experiment (SubX). The weekly and biweekly ensemble means of precipitation and temperature of each model are individually calibrated at each grid point using extended logistic regression, prior to forming equal-weighted multimodel ensemble (MME) probabilistic forecasts. Reforecast skill of week-3–4 precipitation and temperature is assessed in terms of the cross-validated ranked probability skill score (RPSS) and reliability diagram. The multi-model reforecasts are shown to be well calibrated for both variables. Precipitation is moderately skillful over many tropical land regions, including Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, and over subtropical South America, Africa, and Australia. Near-surface temperature skill is considerably higher than for precipitation and extends into the ex-tratropics as well. The multimodel RPSS skill of both precipitation and temperature is shown to exceed that of any of the constituent models over Indonesia, South Asia, South America, and East Africa in all seasons. An example real-time week-3–4 global forecast for 13–26 November 2021 is illustrated and shown to bear the hallmarks of the combined influences of a moderate Madden–Julian oscillation event as well as weak–moderate ongoing La Niña event.
AB - A global multimodel probabilistic subseasonal forecast system for precipitation and near-surface temperature is developed based on three NOAA ensemble prediction systems that make their forecasts available publicly in real time as part of the Subseasonal Experiment (SubX). The weekly and biweekly ensemble means of precipitation and temperature of each model are individually calibrated at each grid point using extended logistic regression, prior to forming equal-weighted multimodel ensemble (MME) probabilistic forecasts. Reforecast skill of week-3–4 precipitation and temperature is assessed in terms of the cross-validated ranked probability skill score (RPSS) and reliability diagram. The multi-model reforecasts are shown to be well calibrated for both variables. Precipitation is moderately skillful over many tropical land regions, including Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, and over subtropical South America, Africa, and Australia. Near-surface temperature skill is considerably higher than for precipitation and extends into the ex-tratropics as well. The multimodel RPSS skill of both precipitation and temperature is shown to exceed that of any of the constituent models over Indonesia, South Asia, South America, and East Africa in all seasons. An example real-time week-3–4 global forecast for 13–26 November 2021 is illustrated and shown to bear the hallmarks of the combined influences of a moderate Madden–Julian oscillation event as well as weak–moderate ongoing La Niña event.
KW - Climate prediction
KW - Ensembles
KW - Forecast verification/skill
KW - Forecasting; Forecasting techniques
KW - Probability forecasts/models/distribution
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85168154938
U2 - 10.1175/WAF-D-22-0160.1
DO - 10.1175/WAF-D-22-0160.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85168154938
SN - 0882-8156
VL - 38
SP - 921
EP - 935
JO - Weather and Forecasting
JF - Weather and Forecasting
IS - 6
ER -