Atmospheric water vapour transport in ACCESS‐S2 and the potential for enhancing skill of subseasonal forecasts of precipitation

Author:

Reid Kimberley J.123ORCID,Hudson Debra4ORCID,King Andrew D.12ORCID,Lane Todd P.12ORCID,Marshall Andrew G.45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

3. School of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Research Program The Bureau of Meteorology Melbourne Australia

5. Centre for Applied Climate Sciences University of Southern Queensland Toowoomba Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractExtended warning of above‐average and extreme precipitation is valuable to a wide range of stakeholders. However, the sporadic nature of precipitation makes it difficult to forecast skilfully beyond one week. Subseasonal forecasting is a growing area of science that aims to predict average weather conditions multiple weeks in advance using dynamical models. Building on recent work in this area, we test the hypothesis that using large‐scale horizontal moisture transport as a predictor for precipitation may increase the forecast skill of the above‐median and high‐precipitation weeks on subseasonal time‐scales. We analysed retrospective forecast (hindcast) sets from the Australian Bureau of Meteorology's latest operational subseasonal‐to‐seasonal forecasting model, ACCESS‐S2, to compare the forecast skill of precipitation using integrated water vapour transport (IVT) as a proxy, compared to using precipitation forecasts directly. We show that ACCESS‐S2 precipitation generally produces more skilful forecasts, except over some regions where IVT could be a useful additional diagnostic for warning of heavy precipitation events.

Funder

Climate Extremes

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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