Advancing Polar Prediction Capabilities on Daily to Seasonal Time Scales

Author:

Jung Thomas1,Gordon Neil D.2,Bauer Peter3,Bromwich David H.4,Chevallier Matthieu5,Day Jonathan J.6,Dawson Jackie7,Doblas-Reyes Francisco8,Fairall Christopher9,Goessling Helge F.10,Holland Marika11,Inoue Jun12,Iversen Trond13,Klebe Stefanie10,Lemke Peter10,Losch Martin10,Makshtas Alexander14,Mills Brian15,Nurmi Pertti16,Perovich Donald17,Reid Philip18,Renfrew Ian A.19,Smith Gregory20,Svensson Gunilla21,Tolstykh Mikhail22,Yang Qinghua23

Affiliation:

1. AWI, Bremerhaven, and University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany

2. Neil Gordon Consulting, Otaki, New Zealand

3. ECMWF, Reading, United Kingdom

4. The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

5. CNRM, Toulouse, France

6. Reading University, Reading, United Kingdom

7. Department of Geography, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

8. ICREA, IC3, and BSC, Barcelona, Spain

9. NOAA, Boulder, Colorado

10. AWI, Bremerhaven, Germany

11. NCAR, Boulder, Colorado

12. NIPR, Tachikawa, Japan

13. NMI, Oslo, Norway

14. AARI, St. Petersburg, Russia

15. Environment Canada, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

16. FMI, Helsinki, Finland

17. ERDC-CRREL, Hanover, New Hampshire

18. Bureau of Meteorology, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia

19. University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom

20. Environment Canada, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

21. University of Stockholm, Stockholm, Sweden

22. INM RAS, and Hydrometcentre of Russia, Moscow, Russia

23. NMEFC, Beijing, China

Abstract

Abstract The polar regions have been attracting more and more attention in recent years, fueled by the perceptible impacts of anthropogenic climate change. Polar climate change provides new opportunities, such as shorter shipping routes between Europe and East Asia, but also new risks such as the potential for industrial accidents or emergencies in ice-covered seas. Here, it is argued that environmental prediction systems for the polar regions are less developed than elsewhere. There are many reasons for this situation, including the polar regions being (historically) lower priority, with fewer in situ observations, and with numerous local physical processes that are less well represented by models. By contrasting the relative importance of different physical processes in polar and lower latitudes, the need for a dedicated polar prediction effort is illustrated. Research priorities are identified that will help to advance environmental polar prediction capabilities. Examples include an improvement of the polar observing system; the use of coupled atmosphere–sea ice–ocean models, even for short-term prediction; and insight into polar–lower-latitude linkages and their role for forecasting. Given the enormity of some of the challenges ahead, in a harsh and remote environment such as the polar regions, it is argued that rapid progress will only be possible with a coordinated international effort. More specifically, it is proposed to hold a Year of Polar Prediction (YOPP) from mid-2017 to mid-2019 in which the international research and operational forecasting communites will work together with stakeholders in a period of intensive observing, modeling, prediction, verification, user engagement, and educational activities.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference83 articles.

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