J an--------Feb-------Mar-------Apr--------May--------Jun--------Jul--------Aug--------Sep--------Oct--------Nov--------Dec-- Applications of Medium Range.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Applications of climate forecast information in water resources management: opportunities and challenges in the Yakima R. basin, Washington Andy Wood Julie.
Advertisements

Reducing Vulnerability to Drought through Mitigation and Preparedness Report to the Inter-Agency Task Force for Disaster Reduction Sixth Meeting Geneva,
List of Nominations Connecting User Needs with Weather Research and Forecasts Rebecca E. Morss National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder, Colorado,
Andy Wood Univ. of Washington Dept. of Civil & Envir. Engr. Statistics related to the merging of short and long lead precipitation predictions in the continental.
Dennis P. Lettenmaier Alan F. Hamlet JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Experimental Real-time Seasonal Hydrologic Forecasting Andrew Wood Dennis Lettenmaier University of Washington Arun Kumar NCEP/EMC/CMB presented: JISAO.
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and water resources: streamflow, reservoir, and hydropower forecasts for the Pacific Northwest Andy Wood and Alan Hamlet.
Coming Attractions from the Washington State Climate Impacts Assessment Lara Whitely Binder Alan Hamlet Marketa McGuire Elsner Climate Impacts Group Center.
Crop Physical System of Dams and Reservoirs Climate change impacts on water supply and irrigation water demand in the Columbia River Basin Jennifer Adam.
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and water resources in the Pacific Northwest Andy Wood Alan Hamlet Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental.
Yakima Project Operation Issues Drought 2005 Chris Lynch Yakima Field Office March 2005.
Review of the 2009 Snowmelt and Rain Streamflow Forecasts & Snow Survey Advisory Team Ron Abramovich, Hydrologist Water Supply Specialist USDA Natural.
Seasonal Volume Forecasts Using Ensemble Streamflow Prediction for the 2008 Water Year Steve King, Hydrologist Northwest River Forecast Center.
Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil and Environmental.
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and water resources: streamflow, reservoir, and hydropower forecasts for the Pacific Northwest Andy Wood and Alan Hamlet.
Developing Tools to Enable Water Resource Managers to Plan for & Adapt to Climate Change Amy Snover, PhD Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.
Recap of Water Year 2009 Hydrologic Forecast and Forecasts for Water Year 2010 Francisco Munoz-Arriola Alan F. Hamlet Shraddhanand Shukla Dennis P. Lettenmaier.
Washington State Climate Change Impacts Assessment: Implications of 21 st century climate change for the hydrology of Washington Marketa M Elsner 1 with.
Understanding Drought
Current Website: An Experimental Surface Water Monitoring System for Continental US Andy W. Wood, Ali.
Andy Wood, Ted Bohn, George Thomas, Ali Akanda, Dennis P. Lettenmaier University of Washington west-wide experimental hydrologic forecast system OBJECTIVE.
CPC’s U.S. Seasonal Drought Outlook & Future Plans April 20, 2010 Brad Pugh, CPC.
IWRM as a Tool for Adaptation to Climate Change
Seasonal Forecasts in Ethiopia: Hydropower, Ag-Econ & Flood Modeling NASA GHA 1 st Participatory Research Workshop and Project Meeting Addis Ababa 12 August.
Approaches to Seasonal Drought Prediction Bradfield Lyon CONAGUA Workshop Nov, 2014 Mexico City, Mexico.
Experimental seasonal hydrologic forecasting for the Western U.S. Dennis P. Lettenmaier Andrew W. Wood, Alan F. Hamlet Climate Impacts Group University.
ESET ALEMU WEST Consultants, Inc. Bellevue, Washington.
Colorado Basin River Forecast Center Stakeholder Forum NOAA’s National Weather Service Welcome to the Colorado Basin RFC Logistics & Introductions Office.
A Variational Ensemble Streamflow Prediction Assessment Approach for Quantifying Streamflow Forecast Skill Elasticity AGU Fall Meeting December 18, 2014.
Center for Science in the Earth System Annual Meeting June 8, 2005 Briefing: Hydrology and water resources.
Apalachicola River and Bay NIDIS System Development Workshop Breakout Session #1 April 27, 2010 Victor Murphy-NWS Southern Region.
The hydrological cycle of the western United States is expected to be significantly affected by climate change (IPCC-AR4 report). Rising temperature and.
Understanding hydrologic changes: application of the VIC model Vimal Mishra Assistant Professor Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Gandhinagar
1 Critical Water Information for Floods to Droughts NOAA’s Hydrology Program January 4, 2006 Responsive to Natural Disasters Forecasts for Hazard Risk.
Drought Prediction (In progress) Besides real-time drought monitoring, it is essential to provide an utlook of what future might look like given the current.
National Weather Service Water Science and Services John J. Kelly, Jr. Director, National Weather Service NOAA Science Advisory Board November 6, 2001.
CBRFC Stakeholder Forum February 24, 2014 Ashley Nielson Kevin Werner NWS Colorado Basin River Forecast Center 1 CBRFC Forecast Verification.
Introduction  Rising temperature and changes in the frequency and magnitude of precipitation due to climate change (IPCC-AR4 report) events are anticipated.
Colorado Basin River Forecast Center and Drought Related Forecasts Kevin Werner.
RFC Climate Requirements 2 nd NOAA Climate NWS Dialogue Meeting January 4, 2006 Kevin Werner.
Sources of Skill and Error in Long Range Columbia River Streamflow Forecasts: A Comparison of the Role of Hydrologic State Variables and Winter Climate.
2016 Columbia River Basin Long-Term Water Supply and Demand Forecast Dan Haller, PE
Climate Change and Water Resources Joint Headquarters Meeting 31 May 2007 Presented by: Kate White, PhD, PE
DOWNSCALING GLOBAL MEDIUM RANGE METEOROLOGICAL PREDICTIONS FOR FLOOD PREDICTION Nathalie Voisin, Andy W. Wood, Dennis P. Lettenmaier University of Washington,
VERIFICATION OF A DOWNSCALING SEQUENCE APPLIED TO MEDIUM RANGE METEOROLOGICAL PREDICTIONS FOR GLOBAL FLOOD PREDICTION Nathalie Voisin, Andy W. Wood and.
EVALUATION OF A GLOBAL PREDICTION SYSTEM: THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER BASIN AS A TEST CASE Nathalie Voisin, Andy W. Wood and Dennis P. Lettenmaier Civil and.
Note: This presentation contains only preliminary research results. If you have any questions, please contact Julie Vano at Thanks.
1 Yun Fan, Huug van den Dool, Dag Lohmann, Ken Mitchell CPC/EMC/NCEP/NWS/NOAA Kunming, May, 2004.
Ongoing Work As part of a project intended to evaluate the potential for improving water resources management in Mexico through use of climate forecasts,
Long-lead streamflow forecasts: 2. An approach based on ensemble climate forecasts Andrew W. Wood, Dennis P. Lettenmaier, Alan.F. Hamlet University of.
Current WEBSITE: Experimental Surface Water Monitor for the Continental US Ali S. Akanda, Andy W. Wood,
Long-Range Streamflow Forecasting Products and Water Resources Management Applications in the Columbia River Basin Alan F. Hamlet, Andy Wood, Dennis P.
Upper Rio Grande R Basin
Andrew Wood, Ali Akanda, Dennis Lettenmaier
Tushar Sinha Assistant Professor
(April, 2001-September, 2002) JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the
Alan F. Hamlet, Andy Wood, Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Jeanine Jones, Western States Water Council
Drought Monitoring and Forecasting Update on CPC Activities
Drought Research and Outreach at CIG
Using Climate Outlook Information for sectoral planning South Asia Climate Outlook Forum 11 September 25-27, 2017 Male, Maldives Suranga Kahandawa - Senior.
UW Civil and Environmental Engineering
Applications of Medium Range To Seasonal/Interannual Climate Forecasts For Water Resources Management In the Yakima River Basin of Washington State Shraddhanand.
Dennis P. Lettenmaier, Andrew W. Wood, Ted Bohn, George Thomas
Nathalie Voisin, Andy W. Wood and Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Hydrologic Forecasting
Andy Wood and Dennis Lettenmaier
Shraddhanand Shukla Andrew W. Wood
University of Washington Center for Science in the Earth System
UW Hydrologic Forecasting: Yakima R. Discussion
Presentation transcript:

J an Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec-- Applications of Medium Range To Seasonal/Interannual Climate Forecasts For Water Resources Management In the Yakima River Basin of Washington State Andy Wood, Anne Steinemann, Donee Alexander, Shraddhanand Shukla Hydrologic Model For Washington State, a model-based hydrologic monitoring and prediction system is being created, currently offering:  spatial maps of soil moisture and SWE  basin average conditions for all “water resources inventory areas” (WRIAs) SM (2 week change) SWE (2 week change) SWE Future Plans Daily update of WRIA basin averages. Current Water year Precipitation, Temperature, Soil moisture, SWE, Runoff (cumulative and 5-day averages) plotted against climatological data) Progress in Monitoring and Prediction Activities Progress in Forecast User Interaction Activities Implement streamflow forecasting (focusing on Yakima R. Basin), using a VIC 1/16 th degree model Develop drought onset and recovery forecasts using traditional (e.g., PDSI) and advanced drought indices Provide 15-day spatial flood risk forecasts based on dynamic model reforecasts from NCEP/ESRL Work with water managers and users to integrate climate and hydrologic forecast information into decision-making in the Yakima River basin Funding has been provided by the NOAA Sector Applications Research Program (SARP). Acknowledgements Project Overview University of Washington State-of-the-art seasonal climate forecasts, such as the NOAA CPC seasonal outlooks, offer the potential to mitigate drought impacts in vulnerable sectors such as agriculture, but these information resources are largely untapped by water managers and users.  This study will bridge the gap by working directly with users in the transition of NOAA climate forecasts, coupled with hydrologic assessments, to water resources operations and drought management.  Our research focuses on water management in Washington State’s Yakima River Basin, home to the state's most valuable irrigated crops, and on state-level drought policy in Washington.  There are three main goals of the project: 1.Collaborate with U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) to evaluate the uses of streamflow forecasts. 2.Interact with water users and managers to identify the factors that influence the degree of adoption of hydrologic forecasts in decision-making. 3.Explore potential uses of model-based monitoring and prediction of hydrologic indicators of drought as triggers for management actions.  The USBR Yakima Project supports approximately 464,000 irrigated acres (via four irrigation districts -- Roza, Yakima-Tieton, Sunnyside Valley and Kittitas -- and the Wapato Division).  Most of the water in the Yakima River comes from snowmelt, and is caught in a series of reservoirs to ensure sufficient water supply throughout the season.  Reliable hydrologic forecasts and other predictive tools are needed earlier in the year.  More detailed forecasts are needed, with explanations of skill, accuracy, and uncertainty that are meaningful to users.  Users are willing to work with forecasters to develop products that are understandable, easily interpreted, and useful in their decision-making processes. Variable Change Plots: 1 day 1week 2 week 1 month Other variables in development: cumulative runoff and precip over varying periods (e.g., 1-, 3-, 6-, 12-months and longer) PROJECT SETTING Interviews have been conducted with USBR operators and agricultural water users. Shown below are the typical operations of water managers/users in a calendar year. Water users have expressed the following perspectives on climate forecasts: Initial Monthly Water Forecast Issued Fields Prepped Seed Bought Summer Water Allocations Decided Irrigation Season Reservoir Drawdowns For Flood Control Repairs / Preparations for irrigation season In drought years, decisions about selling water & fallowing fields Reservoir Operations For Fall Crop Water Deliveries In good years, Fall Crop Reservoir Refill