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Calibration, Bridging, and Merging to Improve GCM Seasonal Temperature Forecasts in Australia
Author(s) -
Andrew Schepen,
QJ Wang,
Yvette Everingham
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
monthly weather review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.862
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1520-0493
pISSN - 0027-0644
DOI - 10.1175/mwr-d-15-0384.1
Subject(s) - gcm transcription factors , climatology , calibration , bridging (networking) , environmental science , forecast skill , general circulation model , econometrics , meteorology , computer science , climate change , statistics , mathematics , geography , geology , computer network , oceanography
There are a number of challenges that must be overcome if GCM forecasts are to be widely adopted in climate-sensitive industries such as agriculture and water management. GCM outputs are frequently biased relative to observations and their ensembles are unreliable in conveying uncertainty through appropriate spread. The calibration, bridging, and merging (CBaM) method has been shown to be an effective tool for postprocessing GCM rainfall forecasts to improve ensemble forecast attributes. In this study, CBaM is modified and extended to postprocess seasonal minimum and maximum temperature forecasts from the POAMA GCM in Australia. Calibration is postprocessing GCM forecasts using a statistical model. Bridging is producing additional forecasts using statistical models that have other GCM output variables (e.g., SST) as predictors. It is demonstrated that merging calibration and bridging forecasts through CBaM effectively improves the skill of POAMA seasonal minimum and maximum temperature forecasts for Australia. It is demonstrated that CBaM produces bias-corrected forecasts that are reliable in ensemble spread and reduces forecasts to climatology when there is no evidence of forecasting skill. This work will help enable the adoption of GCM forecasts by climate-sensitive industries for quantitative modeling and decision-making

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