Application of Postprocessing to Watershed-Scale Subseasonal Climate Forecasts over the Contiguous United States

Author:

Baker Sarah A.1,Wood Andrew W.2,Rajagopalan Balaji3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder, and Bureau of Reclamation, Boulder, Colorado

2. Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory, and Research Applications Laboratory, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

3. Department of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

AbstractSubseasonal to seasonal (S2S) climate forecasting has become a central component of climate services aimed at improving water management. In some cases, operational S2S climate predictions are translated into inputs for follow-on analyses or models, whereas the S2S predictions on their own may provide for qualitative situational awareness. At the spatial scales of water management, however, S2S climate forecasts often suffer from systematic biases, and low skill and reliability. This study assesses the potential to improve S2S forecast skill and salience for watershed applications through the use of postprocessing to harness skills in large-scale fields from the global climate model forecast outputs. To this end, the components-based technique—partial least squares regression (PLSR)—is used to improve the skill of biweekly temperature and precipitation forecasts from the Climate Forecast System version 2 (CFSv2). The PLSR method forms predictor components based on a cross-validated analysis of hindcasts from CFSv2 climate and land surface fields, and the results are benchmarked against raw CFSv2 forecasts, remapped to intermediate-scale watershed areas. We find that postprocessing affords marginal to moderate gains in skill in many watersheds, raising climate forecast skill above a usability threshold over the four seasons analyzed. In other locations, however, postprocessing fails to improve skill, particularly for extreme events, and can lead to unreliably narrow forecast ranges. This work presents evidence that the statistical postprocessing of climate forecast system outputs has potential to improve forecast skill, but that more thorough study of alternative approaches and predictors may be needed to achieve comprehensively positive outcomes.

Funder

Climate Program Office

National Center for Atmospheric Research

Bureau of Reclamation

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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