2005 Water Resources Outlook for Idaho and the Western U.S.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
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.
Advertisements

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.
Experimental Real-time Seasonal Hydrologic Forecasting Andrew Wood Dennis Lettenmaier University of Washington Arun Kumar NCEP/EMC/CMB presented: JISAO.
Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil Engineering University of Washington September,
Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Nathalie Voisin David Pierce Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and water resources: streamflow, reservoir, and hydropower forecasts for the Pacific Northwest Andy Wood and Alan Hamlet.
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and water resources in the Pacific Northwest Andy Wood Alan Hamlet Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental.
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and streamflow in the western U.S. Andy Wood, Alan Hamlet and Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental.
Recap of Water Year 2007 Hydrologic Forecast and Forecasts for Water Year 2008 Alan F. Hamlet Andrew W. Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO/CSES Climate Impacts.
Dennis P. Lettenmaier Alan F. Hamlet JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington July,
Recap of Water Year 2008 Hydrologic Forecast and Forecasts for Water Year 2009 Francisco Munoz-Arriola Alan F. Hamlet Shraddhanand Shukla Dennis P. Lettenmaier.
Hydrologic Outlook for the Pacific Northwest in Water Year 2008 Andy Wood Xiaodong Zeng and George Thomas Alan Hamlet and Dennis Lettenmaier Dept. of Civil.
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.
Recap of Water Year 2007 Hydrologic Forecast and Forecasts for Water Year 2008 Alan F. Hamlet Andrew W. Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO/CSES Climate Impacts.
Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Seethu Babu Marketa McGuire Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil Engineering University.
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and water resources: streamflow, reservoir, and hydropower forecasts for the Pacific Northwest Andy Wood and Alan Hamlet.
Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil Engineering University of Washington September,
Recap of Water Year 2009 Hydrologic Forecast and Forecasts for Water Year 2010 Francisco Munoz-Arriola Alan F. Hamlet Shraddhanand Shukla Dennis P. Lettenmaier.
Hydrologic outlook for the Pacific Northwest in Water Year 2008 Andy Wood Xiaodong Zeng and George Thomas Alan Hamlet and Dennis Lettenmaier Dept. of Civil.
Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil Engineering University of Washington September,
Experimental seasonal hydrologic forecasting for the Western U.S. Dennis P. Lettenmaier Andrew W. Wood, Alan F. Hamlet Climate Impacts Group University.
Improving seasonal range hydro-meteorological predictions -- Hydrologic perspective Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Andy Wood, Alan Hamlet, Seethu Babu, Marketa McGuire and Dennis P. Lettenmaier A West-wide Seasonal to Interannual Hydrologic Forecast System OVERVIEW.
Retrospective Evaluation of the Performance of Experimental Long-Lead Columbia River Streamflow Forecasts Climate Forecast and Estimated Initial Soil Moisture.
Sources of Skill and Error in Long Range Columbia River Streamflow Forecasts: A Comparison of the Role of Hydrologic State Variables and Winter Climate.
UW Experimental West-wide Seasonal Hydrologic Forecasting System Andy Wood and Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Assessing the Influence of Decadal Climate Variability and Climate Change on Snowpacks in the Pacific Northwest JISAO/SMA Climate Impacts Group and the.
Hydrologic Forecasting Alan F. Hamlet Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO/CSES Climate Impacts Group Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of.
Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and the Department.
Alan F. Hamlet, Andy Wood, Nathalie Voisin, Dennis P. Lettenmaier Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil.
Implementing Probabilistic Climate Outlooks within a Seasonal Hydrologic Forecast System Andy Wood and Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental.
Remote Sensing Applications to Improve Seasonal Forecasting of Streamflow and Reservoir Storage in the Upper Snake River Basin Marketa McGuire, Andy W.
Long-lead streamflow forecasts: 2. An approach based on ensemble climate forecasts Andrew W. Wood, Dennis P. Lettenmaier, Alan.F. Hamlet University of.
Use of Climate Forecasts in Hydrologic Prediction Applications Alan F. Hamlet Dennis P. Lettenmaier JISAO/CSES Climate Impacts Group Dept. of Civil and.
Long-Range Streamflow Forecasting Products and Water Resources Management Applications in the Columbia River Basin Alan F. Hamlet, Andy Wood, Dennis P.
Estimating Changes in Flood Risk due to 20th Century Warming and Climate Variability in the Western U.S. Alan F. Hamlet Dennis P. Lettenmaier.
Andrew Wood, Ali Akanda, Dennis Lettenmaier
(April, 2001-September, 2002) JISAO Climate Impacts Group and the
Alan F. Hamlet, Andy Wood, Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Hydrologic forecasting for the NAMS region – extension of the University of Washington westwide forecast system Dennis P. Lettenmaier Chunmei Zhu Andrew.
Challenges in western water management: What can science offer?
Seasonal outlooks for hydrology and water resources: streamflow forecasts for the Columbia River basin Andrew Wood Alan Hamlet Marketa McGuire Dennis.
Dennis P. Lettenmaier, Andrew W. Wood, Ted Bohn, George Thomas
A West-wide Seasonal to Interannual Hydrologic Forecast System
2006 Water Resources Outlook for Idaho and the Western U.S.
Trends in Runoff and Soil Moisture in the Western U.S
Kostas M. Andreadis1, Dennis P. Lettenmaier1
Hydrologic Forecasting
Andy Wood and Dennis Lettenmaier
Long-Lead Streamflow Forecast for the Columbia River Basin for
Effects of Temperature and Precipitation Variability on Snowpack Trends in the Western U.S. JISAO/SMA Climate Impacts Group and the Department of Civil.
JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System and the
Andrew Wood, Alan Hamlet, Dennis Lettenmaier University of Washington
Land surface modeling for real-time hydrologic prediction and drought forecasting Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
UW Westwide experimental hydrologic forecast system
Experimental Real-time Seasonal Hydrologic Forecasting
Alan F. Hamlet Andrew W. Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Climate Change in the Pacific Northwest
Advances in seasonal hydrologic prediction
A. Wood, A.F. Hamlet, M. McGuire, S. Babu and Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Andy Wood and Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Alan F. Hamlet Andrew W. Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier
Recap of Water Year 2008 Hydrologic Forecast
University of Washington experimental west-wide seasonal hydrologic forecast system Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Andrew W. Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier
HYDROLOGIC APPLICATIONS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Hydrologic Changes in the Western U.S. from
UW Hydrologic Forecasting: Yakima R. Discussion
2006 Water Resources Outlook for the Columbia River Basin
Alan F. Hamlet, Andrew W. Wood, Dennis P. Lettenmaier,
Presentation transcript:

2005 Water Resources Outlook for Idaho and the Western U.S. JISAO Center for Science in the Earth System Climate Impacts Group and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington October, 2004 http://www.hydro.washington.edu/Lettenmaier/Presentations/2004/hamlet_2005_forecast_oct_2004.ppt Alan F. Hamlet Andy Wood Dennis P. Lettenmaier

Background

Background: Forecast System Schematic NCDC met. station obs. up to 2-4 months from current local scale (1/8 degree) weather inputs soil moisture snowpack Hydrologic model spin up SNOTEL Update streamflow, soil moisture, snow water equivalent, runoff 25th Day, Month 0 1-2 years back LDAS/other real-time met. forcings for spin-up gap Hydrologic forecast simulation Month 6 - 12 INITIAL STATE SNOTEL / MODIS* Update ensemble forecasts ESP traces (40) CPC-based outlook (13) NCEP GSM ensemble (20) NSIPP-1 ensemble (9) * experimental, not yet in real-time product

Seasonal Climate Forecast Data Sources ESP ENSO/PDO ENSO CPC Official Outlooks Seasonal Forecast Model (SFM) CAS OCN SMLR CCA CA NSIPP-1 dynamical model VIC Hydrology Model NOAA NASA UW

Background: Hydrology Model

Background: Estimating Initial Conditions SNOTEL assimilation Assimilation Method weight station OBS’ influence over VIC cell based on distance and elevation difference number of stations influencing a given cell depends on specified influence distances spatial weighting function elevation weighting function SNOTEL/ASP VIC cell distances “fit”: OBS weighting increased throughout season OBS anomalies applied to VIC long term means, combined with VIC-simulated SWE adjustment specific to each VIC snow band important point(s): the approach attempts to make use of forecast skill from 2 sources: better understanding of synoptic scale teleconnections and the effects of persistence in SSTs on regional climate, as reproduced in coupled ocean-atmosphere models; the macroscale hydrologic model yields an improved ability to model the persistence in hydrologic states at the regional scale (more compatible with climate model scales than prior hydrologic modeling). Climate forecasts with monthly and seasonal horizons are now operationally available, and if they can be translated to streamflow, then they may be useful for water management.

snow cover (MODIS) assimilation (Snake R. trial) Framework: Estimating Initial Conditions snow cover (MODIS) assimilation (Snake R. trial) Snowcover BEFORE update Snowcover AFTER update MODIS update for April 1, 2004 Forecast snow added removed

Background: Streamflow Forecast Locations California Columbia R. basin in development: Colorado R., Upper Rio Grande Snake R. basin

Linkage to Reservoir Models Streamflow Forecast Bias Correction Storage Ensemble Reservoir Model Observed Reservoir Contents Demand Scenarios

ColSim Storage Forecast

Recap of Water Year 2004

Initial Conditions for Winter 2003-04 Soil Moisture and Snow Water Equivalent (SWE)

Initial Conditions for Winter 2003-04 Soil Moisture and Snow Water Equivalent (SWE)

Initial Conditions for Winter 2003-04 Soil Moisture and Snow Water Equivalent (SWE)

Initial Conditions for Winter 2003-04 Soil Moisture and Snow Water Equivalent (SWE)

Initial Conditions for Winter 2003-04 Soil Moisture and Snow Water Equivalent (SWE)

Winter 2003-04: PNW streamflow By Fall, slightly low flows were anticipated By winter, moderate deficits were forecasted

Winter 2003-04: seasonal volume forecasts Comparison with RFC forecast for Columbia River at the Dalles, OR UW forecasts made on 25th of each month RFC forecasts made several times monthly: 1st, mid-month, late (UW’s ESP unconditional and CPC forecasts shown) UW RFC

Last winter: volume forecasts for a sample of PNW locations

Last winter: volume forecasts for a sample of PNW locations

Last winter: volume forecasts for a sample of PNW locations

Last winter: volume forecasts for a sample of PNW locations

Last winter: volume forecasts for a sample of PNW locations

Last winter: volume forecasts for a sample of PNW locations

Last winter: volume forecasts for a sample of PNW locations

Evaluation of Last Year’s ColSim Storage Forecast Obs.Sys Storage Sept 15, 2004

System Storage Forecast from SnakeSim: Jackson Lake Palisades Island Park Ririe American Falls Lake Walcott 11 ENSO neutral years (reshuffled 3 times) Random historic demand scenarios Full Pool Active Reservoir Storage (kaf) Obs. Storage Sept 30, 2004 Green = ensemble mean

Outlook for Water Year 2005

Winter Climate Forecasts Dominate Hydrologic State Variables Dominate April 1 SWE (mm) Winter Climate Forecasts Dominate Hydrologic State Variables Dominate June December March Range =16.7% of ensemble summer mean

Initial Soil Moisture Conditions

Natural Flows at Milner 1928-1989

Simulated Natural Flow at Milner (Oct ESP Nino3.4 between +0.2 and +1.2)

Upper Snake Storage Climatology Historic water years 1928-1992 Storage Sept 30, 2004

System Storage Forecast from SnakeSim: Jackson Lake Palisades Island Park Ririe American Falls Lake Walcott Nino3.4 anomaly between 0.2 and 1.2 C Demand aligned with water cond. October 1 Spin Up Active Reservoir Storage (kaf)

Impacts of the West-Wide Drought on the Pacific Northwest

1930s Drought Soil Moisture Soil moisture-defined drought 80 Percent severity 100 SAD curve to left. To right, raw percent severity (below 80% is white) on top panel, drought classifications on bottom panel. Consistently severe for areas up to ~ 5 km^2 up to 36 month duration. At this point areas are encompassing cells that only experience drought for a few of the 36+ months. Figure courtesy of Elizabeth Clark and Kostas Andreadis, UW

Current Drought Soil Moisture Soil moisture-defined drought 80 Percent severity 100 Severity for longer duration drops quickly with area, while remaining durations are fairly consistent in severity up to ~ 3.5 million km^2. Figure courtesy of Elizabeth Clark and Kostas Andreadis, UW

Concluding Remarks Soil moistures in Oct, 2004 are wetter overall in comparison with Oct, 2003. Drought risks appear to be about the same as last year based on likely mid-winter Nino3.4 anomalies, and the highest likelihood is for flows clustered around normal conditions (very high and very low flows unlikely). However, one very high and one very low flow year have both occurred for this range of Nino3.4 anomalies, so both extremes cannot be ruled out. The wild card is the West-wide drought. If the large scale climate anomaly that has impacted precipitation over the west continues to impinge on southern Idaho, analogue years based on Nino3.4 anomalies may not be very representative. Will the drought continue, and will it impact Idaho if it does?