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WMO 3.3 Summary of regional reports on the exchange of weather radar data, highlighting progress, plans and challenges CBS/OPAG-IOS Workshop on Radar Data.

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Presentation on theme: "WMO 3.3 Summary of regional reports on the exchange of weather radar data, highlighting progress, plans and challenges CBS/OPAG-IOS Workshop on Radar Data."— Presentation transcript:

1 WMO 3.3 Summary of regional reports on the exchange of weather radar data, highlighting progress, plans and challenges CBS/OPAG-IOS Workshop on Radar Data Exchange Exeter, UK, 24-26 April 2013 Daniel Michelson, SMHI, Sweden

2 WMO Guidance: INF3.1 Data exchange practices  WHAT? Polar data and/or products More radar than other non-Res 40 obs data? Growth trend (more data being exchanged)?  WHERE? Between/among which countries?  HOW (technical)? File format(s) Exchange mechanisms, e.g. FTP, GTS, other

3 WMO Guidance: INF3.1 Data exchange practices  HOW (political)? Bilateral / multilateral agreement? Wider political framework? Capacity building within the region? Does Resolution 25 help? What is the nature of existing data exchange? How prepared are we for global data exchange?

4 Template summary table WHERE?WHAT?HOW? CountriesPolarProductsFormatCommsAgreement Countries denoted by top-level domain.

5 RA I – Africa WHERE?WHAT?HOW? CountriesPolarProductsFormatCommsAgreement BW, MZ, ZAZ inRegional composites out TITAN MoU Centralized

6 RA II – Asia WHERE?WHAT?HOW? CountriesPolarProductsFormatCommsAgreement CN – HKZ, V, WCompositePolar: WSR- 88D Composite: ? WIS using “MSTP special line” Bilateral Guangdong – HK. Centralized compositing. CN – MO CN – KR5 productsGIFSpecial ”GTS” lineBilateral CN –> KP“several”Bilateral, one-way CN – TWCompositesTo be considered

7 RA III – South America  Brazil Many radars and many owners/operators, some of which are commercial. Most data available in TITAN format. Some in UF, PNG, BUFR, netCDF, industrial.  Argentina: several radars, some providing data in TITAN format, others using proprietary industrial formats (EDGE, MURAN, IRIS, Rainbow)  Elsewhere: industrial formats  Big challenges to coordinate domestic data flow.  International exchange? (Data from BR and PY)

8 RA IV – North and Central America, Caribbean WHERE?WHAT?HOW? CountriesPolarProductsFormatCommsAgreement CA – US“native” CA: IRIS US: L2, L3, L4 GTS FTP – pull Bilateral AN – SXAN: IRIS CU - USCompositeUS L4PushTo NWS (Hurricane Center) BB, BZ, GF, TT (more?) BUFRPlannedEC Caribbean radar project – multilateral MoU BS, CU, PR ?(On BS website)

9 RA V – South-West Pacific WHERE?WHAT?HOW? CountriesPolarProductsFormatCommsAgreement AU – NZyes “raw” “graphics” Bilateral MY – SGBUFRBilateral

10 RA VI – Europe WHERE?WHAT?HOW? CountriesPolarProductsFormatCommsAgreement BE, CZ, DE, DK, EE, ES, FI, FR, HR, IE, IS, NL, NO, PL, PT, RO, RS, SE, SI, SK, UK … Z, VZ composite R composite RR-1hr composite ODIM_H5 ODIM_BUFR FTP GTS EUMETNET OPERA – centralized through “Odyssey” AT, CH, CZ, DE, HR, PL, SI, SK Z CAPPIs in Z composites out BUFRGTSCERAD – centralized Vertical wind profilesBUFRGTSEUMETNET CWINDE

11 RA VI – Europe (continued) WHERE?WHAT?HOW? CountriesPolarProductsFormatCommsAgreement DK, EE, FI, LV, NO, SE Z Pseudo- CAPPI Vertical wind profiles HDF5 – COST 717 model NORDRAD – “persistent HTTP”, XML headers, “notify-pull” NORDRAD Cooperation Agreement: multilateral, decentralized BY, DK, DE, EE, FI, LT, LV, NO, PL, SE, UA T, Z, V, W Dual-pol moments ODIM_H5BALTRAD – HTTP, own HTML headers, “subscribe-push”, WIS connectivity BALTRAD Cooperation Agreement: multilateral, decentralized Both BALTRAD and OPERA incorporate centralized QC in their data processing chains.

12 OPERA exchange matrix Version: 3 January 2013 Updated regularly

13 Existing exchange between regions? Yes:  NCEP Stage IV surface rain composites from NEXRAD in GRIB format (RA IV) used by ECMWF (RA VI)  EC Caribbean (RA IV) radar project includes GF (RA III) Potentially yes:  RA II and V: pursuing framework under the umbrella of ASEAN

14 Important issues to be discussed  Network load balancing between site and center (domestic data transmission) ray-by-ray.  Standard file format required for managing polarimetric data. Vital that the standard is adhered to.  Data/products should be defined by levels (I-III) for exchange.  WMO experts should define harmonized QC methods which are then applied by members (RQQI?).

15 Summary – progress  National and regional weather radar networks have developed relatively recently; coverage over land becoming more complete, but still large gaps.  Polarimetric radar technology is being phased into operational networks globally.  Holistic QC chains are emerging in some places, but are still in their infancy.  Harmonized data representation proven possible in a large heterogeneous network (ODIM).

16 Summary – plans  National networks to continue to develop and improve.  Regional networks to evolve.  Increased data availability should help clarify/refine user requirements, e.g. NWP, hydrology, etc.

17 Summary – challenges  Surface-based scanning weather radar will always have irregular spatial coverage.  Unlike e.g. satellite data, radar data are much more heterogeneous due to different drivers, manufacturers, operators, configurations, data representations, etc.  Political issues: data availability, agreement on e.g. data exchange model, commerical.  Access to sufficient network bandwidth supporting exchange.

18 www.wmo.int Thank you for your attention Daniel Michelson Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute Norrköping, Sweden daniel.michelson@smhi.se


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