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Office of Coast Survey Improving NOAA’s Capacity to Address Coastal Inundation Events The Storm Surge Roadmap and the Way Forward Jesse C. Feyen Storm.

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Presentation on theme: "Office of Coast Survey Improving NOAA’s Capacity to Address Coastal Inundation Events The Storm Surge Roadmap and the Way Forward Jesse C. Feyen Storm."— Presentation transcript:

1 Office of Coast Survey Improving NOAA’s Capacity to Address Coastal Inundation Events The Storm Surge Roadmap and the Way Forward Jesse C. Feyen Storm Surge Roadmap Portfolio Manager

2 Office of Coast Survey Thanks to Numerous Co-Authors… NOS/Coast Survey Development Lab – Yuji Funakoshi, Machuan Peng, Jindong Wang, Frank Aikman, Teresa Fleisher NWS/National Hurricane Center – Jamie Rhome NWS/Meteorological Development Lab – Arthur Taylor, Amy Haase, Anne Myckow NWS HQ – Jennifer Sprague NWS/NCEP/Environmental Modeling Center – Hendrik Tolman, Andre van der Westhuysen, Arun Chawla, Iliya Rivin SocResearch Miami – Betty Morrow NCAR/Societal Impacts Program – Jeff Lazo

3 Office of Coast Survey The Vision Highly accurate, relevant, and timely information CLEARLY COMMUNICATED which results in reductions in loss of life and ensures communities are resilient

4 Office of Coast Survey NOAA’s Storm Surge Roadmap Plan for improving models, products and services Provides a common direction for the agency Led by cross-NOAA team of experts –Executive oversight by NOS and NWS –Action team with NWS, NOS, and OAR experts in meteorology, oceanography, topobathy, GIS, modeling, observations, social science, outreach, … Bottom line: first comprehensive strategy to holistically address needs and establish a community response

5 Office of Coast Survey The Bottom Line for NOAA Customers Ask: Who will get flooded? How much? When will it arrive and leave? What will the impacts be? How often will it occur? How should I act? Roadmap Goals: 1.Accurately determine storm water levels –T–Total Water Level (TWL) models with surge + tides + waves + rivers –U–Uncertainty (ensembles, probabilistic ) 2.Intuitively describe inundation as flooding above ground level –I–In statements and maps 3.Communicate actionable information –B–Based on social science

6 Office of Coast Survey Surge Model Development Efforts Moving toward total water level modeling –Adding tides to operational surge model SLOSH –Implementing extratropical surge+tide model ESTOFS –Coupling surge (ADCIRC) and wave (WAVEWATCH III ® ) models in the Nearshore Wave Prediction System Accelerating transition of research to operations –IOOS testbed for evaluating costs and benefits of transitioning community models to operations –Investigating ensemble approaches to support multiple surge models in the future

7 Office of Coast Survey Adding Tides to SLOSH Tide constituent data from ADCIRC models Experimental use this hurricane season Surge + Tides = SLOSH+Tides

8 Office of Coast Survey Extratropical Surge and Tide Prediction Extratropical Surge+Tide Operational Forecast System (ESTOFS) operational in spring Uses community-based ADCIRC model with GFS winds Coupled to WAVEWATCH III ® for Nearshore Wave Prediction System (NWPS) Output in NetCDF and 2.5 km NDFD GRIB2 http://nomad1.ncep.noaa.gov/pub/raid2/estofs/

9 Office of Coast Survey IOOS Testbed: using Community-Based Models to Improve Operations Provides shared, systematic methodology for evaluating benefits of research models for transition to operations Coastal inundation subgroup –Tropical (Ike, Rita) and extratropical (Scituate, MA) –Evaluating SLOSH, ADCIRC, FVCOM, SELFE for surge predictions, coupled to wave models SWAN, SWAVE, WWIII, WWM

10 Office of Coast Survey Ensemble Storm Surge Modeling: Combining Multiple Predictions Ensemble approach requires: –Multiple simulations (including both multiple forcing of one model and multiple surge models) –Statistical assessment of the ensemble and its members Developing ensemble of forecast tracks –Tracks generated by forecasts and dynamical models (e.g., NHC, GFDL, HWRF, GFS, UKMET, ECMWF…) –P-Surge adopted to use multiple modeled tracks, and later other surge models can be added to ensemble

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13 Making Surge Statements Intuitive Describes flooding above ground level to reduce confusion about datums and location Also describes extent of flooding inland Local Weather Forecast Office products have followed suit Previous National Hurricane Center Statement: STORM SURGE FLOODING OF 2 TO 4 FEET ABOVE NORMAL TIDE LEVELS CAN BE EXPECTED ALONG THE WEST COAST OF FLORIDA IN AREAS OF ONSHORE FLOW SOUTH OF VENICE AND IN FLORIDA BAY. Current National Hurricane Center Statement: STORM SURGE WILL RAISE WATER LEVELS BY AS MUCH AS 4 FEET ABOVE GROUND LEVEL ALONG THE WEST COAST OF FLORIDA IN AREAS OF ONSHORE FLOW SOUTH OF VENICE AND IN FLORIDA BAY... WITH LARGE AND DANGEROUS BATTERING WAVES... THE SURGE COULD PENETRATE AS FAR INLAND AS ABOUT 10 MILES FROM THE SHORE WITH DEPTH GENERALLY DECREASING AS THE WATER MOVES INLAND.

14 Office of Coast Survey Making Probabilistic Surge Guidance Intuitive: Flooding Above Ground Level Drives forecast products; experimental for 2012 –http://www.nws.noaa.gov/mdl/phish/

15 Office of Coast Survey Communicating Actionable Surge Information Employing social science techniques to assess user’s needs and design new products Results show a significant portion of the surge vulnerable population does not understand: –what storm surge is, their vulnerability, what the forecast information means, and the potential impacts –people desire more info but unsure of how Now evaluating new product prototypes –High resolution inundation graphics in development and testing with public, EMs, media

16 Office of Coast Survey Making Surge Information Accessible Storm surge listed on NOAAWatch, NOAA’s all hazards monitor Centralized NOAA website on storm surge expertise to be released this year

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