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Skill of Subseasonal Forecasts in Europe: Effect of Bias Correction and Downscaling Using Surface Observations
Author(s) -
Monhart S.,
Spirig C.,
Bhend J.,
Bogner K.,
Schär C.,
Liniger M. A.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2017jd027923
Subject(s) - climatology , environmental science , downscaling , forecast skill , precipitation , meteorology , consensus forecast , quantile , range (aeronautics) , quantitative precipitation forecast , debiasing , econometrics , geography , mathematics , geology , engineering , psychology , aerospace engineering , cognitive science
Subseasonal predictions bridge the gap between medium‐range weather forecasts and seasonal climate predictions. This time horizon is of crucial importance for many planning purposes, including energy production and agriculture. The verification of such predictions is normally done for areal averages of upper‐air parameters. Only few studies exist that verify the forecasts for surface parameters with observational stations, although this is crucial for real‐world applications, which often require such predictions at specific surface locations. With this study we provide an extensive station‐based verification of subseasonal forecasts against 1,637 ground based observational time series across Europe. Twenty years of temperature and precipitation reforecasts of the European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts Integrated Forecasting System are used to analyze the period of April 1995 to March 2014. A lead time and seasonally dependent bias correction is performed to correct the daily temperature and precipitation forecasts at all stations individually. Two bias correction techniques are compared, a mean debiasing method and a quantile mapping approach. Commonly used skill scores characterizing different aspects of forecast quality are computed for weekly aggregated forecasts with lead times of 5–32 days. Overall, promising skill is found for temperature in all seasons except spring. Temperature forecasts tend to show higher skill in Northern Europe and in particular around the Baltic Sea, and in winter. Bias correction is shown to be essential in enhancing the forecast skill in all four weeks for most of the stations and for both variables with QM generally performing better.

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