|
Quantitative Precipitation Forecast Process Reflects New Operations Philosophy
To ensure Weather Forecast Offices (WFOs) make the most effective use of Quantitative Precipitation Forecast (QPF) output from the NWS Hydrometeorological Prediction Center (HPC) to populate the National Digital Forecast Database (NDFD), the NWS Corporate Board has established a QPF process to help WFOs reduce their workloads and focus forecaster efforts on hazardous and high impact events.
Earlier this year, the NWS Corporate Board clarified how things should work under the new NWS Operations Philosophy, as described in an earlier NOAA's NWS Focus article.
One of the first examples of applying the Operations Philosophy to the forecast process is how the NWS populates the QPF element in the NDFD. The HPC generates and maintains QPFs in collaboration with the WFOs and River Forecast Centers (RFCs). The WFOs and RFCs can adjust the HPC QPF as needed through collaborative processes for input to the NDFD and NWS River Forecast System, respectively. More information on the NDFD collaborative process can be found at http://www.nws.noaa.gov/ndfd/collaboration.htm.
"Weather Forecast Offices can choose to accept the HPC QPF or adjust for the final NDFD output," said Greg Mandt, Chairman of the NWS Corporate Board's Operations Committee, and Director, Office of Climate, Water, and Weather Services (OCWWS). "For instance, when the office priority is severe weather and all talent is focused on urgent tasks, the WFO may choose to accept the HPC QPF without adjustments. We are further empowering our WFOs to make these important decisions."
The NWS has already begun steps to enhance the collaboration process, said Lynn Maximuk, Meteorologist-In-Charge of the Pleasant Hill, MO, WFO. During the past several months the HPC has collaborated with field offices using the nationally-deployed collaboration chat software. This is in addition to traditional collaboration and coordination methods by telephone, used by NCEP, RFCs, and WFOs.
"Effective collaboration will lead to consistent quantitative precipitation forecasts across all programs and services in the NWS," Maximuk said. "This will maximize use of expertise at all levels to provide the best NWS information possible."
An early exchange of ideas and model diagnostics between the WFO and HPC forecasters has already yielded dividends, according to Ed Danaher, HPC's Development and Training Branch Chief. Danaher has worked closely with the field offices, regional headquarters, other NCEP service centers, and NWS Headquarters to forge the new operational collaborative paradigm for the IFPS/NDFD era.
Danaher said HPC often adjusts its guidance based on input from field office forecasters. Since this collaboration takes place before the national products are issued, the end result is customers receive consistent, higher-quality river forecasts and forecast information provided through the NDFD and other means. The collaboration on QPFs is an integral part of the grid preparation process at the WFOs as they prepare their input to the NDFD.
"Field forecasters have already noticed a renewed spirit of teamwork with HPC in developing a high resolution QPF that provides the best the NWS has to offer," Maximuk added.
While collaboration has led to more coherent, higher resolution QPFs, Mandt said more remains to be done.
Expanding collaboration efforts between the WFOs and RFCs are next on the horizon as the playing field has shifted from days past when WFOs issued primarily text forecasts. Inter-WFO collaboration and the development of graphical forecast editors to prepare high-resolution forecast grids have led to more consistent forecasts across WFO boundaries which previously had caused problems in QPFs that RFCs used in the river forecast models.
There are also challenges in maximizing collaboration between the WFOs, RFCs, and HPC since each of their workstations and tools are not exactly the same. Also, the "domains" covered by the QPFs are different. For instance, Maximuk said, a domain or geographic area on a WFO workstation is limited to a state or two and portions of other states. RFCs cover perhaps 15 to 25 WFO domains, and HPC covers the conterminous United States.
Mandt added that a new NWS Instruction 10-506, Digital Data Products/Services Specification, is due out this winter. The 10-506 instruction will provide a framework for products and services generated from the digital forecast database prepared by the NWS. The instruction also will describe the basic digital data infrastructure including the NDFD, locally prepared digital forecast databases, and associated NWS collaboration to enable the production of a seamless suite of digital forecast data, including QPF.
Back to Top
|