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Siegfried D. Schubert
,
Ronald E. Stewart
,
Hailan Wang
,
Mathew Barlow
,
Ernesto H. Berbery
,
Wenju Cai
,
Martin P. Hoerling
,
Krishna K. Kanikicharla
,
Randal D. Koster
,
Bradfield Lyon
,
Annarita Mariotti
,
Carlos R. Mechoso
,
Omar V. Müller
,
Belen Rodriguez-Fonseca
,
Richard Seager
,
Sonia I. Seneviratne
,
Lixia Zhang
, and
Tianjun Zhou

Abstract

Drought affects virtually every region of the world, and potential shifts in its character in a changing climate are a major concern. This article presents a synthesis of current understanding of meteorological drought, with a focus on the large-scale controls on precipitation afforded by sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies, land surface feedbacks, and radiative forcings. The synthesis is primarily based on regionally focused articles submitted to the Global Drought Information System (GDIS) collection together with new results from a suite of atmospheric general circulation model experiments intended to integrate those studies into a coherent view of drought worldwide. On interannual time scales, the preeminence of ENSO as a driver of meteorological drought throughout much of the Americas, eastern Asia, Australia, and the Maritime Continent is now well established, whereas in other regions (e.g., Europe, Africa, and India), the response to ENSO is more ephemeral or nonexistent. Northern Eurasia, central Europe, and central and eastern Canada stand out as regions with few SST-forced impacts on precipitation on interannual time scales. Decadal changes in SST appear to be a major factor in the occurrence of long-term drought, as highlighted by apparent impacts on precipitation of the late 1990s “climate shifts” in the Pacific and Atlantic SST. Key remaining research challenges include (i) better quantification of unforced and forced atmospheric variability as well as land–atmosphere feedbacks, (ii) better understanding of the physical basis for the leading modes of climate variability and their predictability, and (iii) quantification of the relative contributions of internal decadal SST variability and forced climate change to long-term drought.

Full access
Suryachandra A. Rao
,
B. N. Goswami
,
A. K. Sahai
,
E. N. Rajagopal
,
P. Mukhopadhyay
,
M. Rajeevan
,
S. Nayak
,
L. S. Rathore
,
S. S. C. Shenoi
,
K. J. Ramesh
,
R. S. Nanjundiah
,
M. Ravichandran
,
A. K. Mitra
,
D. S. Pai
,
S. K. R. Bhowmik
,
A. Hazra
,
S. Mahapatra
,
S. K. Saha
,
H. S. Chaudhari
,
S. Joseph
,
P. Sreenivas
,
S. Pokhrel
,
P. A. Pillai
,
R. Chattopadhyay
,
M. Deshpande
,
R. P. M. Krishna
,
Renu S. Das
,
V. S. Prasad
,
S. Abhilash
,
S. Panickal
,
R. Krishnan
,
S. Kumar
,
D. A. Ramu
,
S. S. Reddy
,
A. Arora
,
T. Goswami
,
A. Rai
,
A. Srivastava
,
M. Pradhan
,
S. Tirkey
,
M. Ganai
,
R. Mandal
,
A. Dey
,
S. Sarkar
,
S. Malviya
,
A. Dhakate
,
K. Salunke
, and
Parvinder Maini

Abstract

In spite of the summer monsoon’s importance in determining the life and economy of an agriculture-dependent country like India, committed efforts toward improving its prediction and simulation have been limited. Hence, a focused mission mode program Monsoon Mission (MM) was founded in 2012 to spur progress in this direction. This article explains the efforts made by the Earth System Science Organization (ESSO), Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), Government of India, in implementing MM to develop a dynamical prediction framework to improve monsoon prediction. Climate Forecast System, version 2 (CFSv2), and the Met Office Unified Model (UM) were chosen as the base models. The efforts in this program have resulted in 1) unparalleled skill of 0.63 for seasonal prediction of the Indian monsoon (for the period 1981–2010) in a high-resolution (∼38 km) seasonal prediction system, relative to present-generation seasonal prediction models; 2) extended-range predictions by a CFS-based grand multimodel ensemble (MME) prediction system; and 3) a gain of 2-day lead time from very high-resolution (12.5 km) Global Forecast System (GFS)-based short-range predictions up to 10 days. These prediction skills are on par with other global leading weather and climate centers, and are better in some areas. Several developmental activities like coupled data assimilation, changes in convective parameterization, cloud microphysics schemes, and parameterization of land surface processes (including snow and sea ice) led to the improvements such as reducing the strong model biases in the Indian summer monsoon simulation and elsewhere in the tropics.

Open access
Sid-Ahmed Boukabara
,
Isaac Moradi
,
Robert Atlas
,
Sean P. F. Casey
,
Lidia Cucurull
,
Ross N. Hoffman
,
Kayo Ide
,
V. Krishna Kumar
,
Ruifang Li
,
Zhenglong Li
,
Michiko Masutani
,
Narges Shahroudi
,
Jack Woollen
, and
Yan Zhou

Abstract

A modular extensible framework for conducting observing system simulation experiments (OSSEs) has been developed with the goals of 1) supporting decision-makers with quantitative assessments of proposed observing systems investments, 2) supporting readiness for new sensors, 3) enhancing collaboration across the community by making the most up-to-date OSSE components accessible, and 4) advancing the theory and practical application of OSSEs. This first implementation, the Community Global OSSE Package (CGOP), is for short- to medium-range global numerical weather prediction applications. The CGOP is based on a new mesoscale global nature run produced by NASA using the 7-km cubed sphere version of the Goddard Earth Observing System, version 5 (GEOS-5), atmospheric general circulation model and the January 2015 operational version of the NOAA global data assimilation (DA) system. CGOP includes procedures to simulate the full suite of observing systems used operationally in the global DA system, including conventional in situ, satellite-based radiance, and radio occultation observations. The methodology of adding a new proposed observation type is documented and illustrated with examples of current interest. The CGOP is designed to evolve, both to improve its realism and to keep pace with the advance of operational systems.

Full access
Parthasarathi Mukhopadhyay
,
Peter Bechtold
,
Yuejian Zhu
,
R. Phani Murali Krishna
,
Siddharth Kumar
,
Malay Ganai
,
Snehlata Tirkey
,
Tanmoy Goswami
,
M. Mahakur
,
Medha Deshpande
,
V. S. Prasad
,
C. J. Johny
,
Ashim Mitra
,
Raghavendra Ashrit
,
Abhijit Sarkar
,
Sahadat Sarkar
,
Kumar Roy
,
Elphin Andrews
,
Radhika Kanase
,
Shilpa Malviya
,
S. Abhilash
,
Manoj Domkawale
,
S. D. Pawar
,
Ashu Mamgain
,
V. R. Durai
,
Ravi S. Nanjundiah
,
Ashis K. Mitra
,
E. N. Rajagopal
,
M. Mohapatra
, and
M. Rajeevan

Abstract

During August 2018 and 2019 the southern state of India, Kerala, received unprecedented heavy rainfall, which led to widespread flooding. We aim to characterize the convective nature of these events and the large-scale atmospheric forcing, while exploring their predictability by three state-of-the-art global prediction systems: the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP)-based India Meteorological Department (IMD) operational Global Forecast System (GFS), the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Integrated Forecast System (IFS), and the Unified Model–based NCUM being run at the National Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (NCMRWF). Satellite, radar, and lightning observations suggest that these rain events were dominated by cumulus congestus and shallow convection with strong zonal flow leading to orographically enhanced rainfall over the Ghats mountain range; sporadic deep convection was also present during the 2019 event. A moisture budget analyses using the fifth major global reanalysis produced by ECMWF (ERA5) and forecast output revealed significantly increased moisture convergence below 800 hPa during the main rain events compared to August climatology. The total column-integrated precipitable water tendency, however, is found to be small throughout the month of August, indicating a balance between moisture convergence and drying by precipitation. By applying a Rossby wave filter to the rainfall anomalies it is shown that the large-scale moisture convergence is associated with westward-propagating barotropic Rossby waves over Kerala, leading to increased predictability of these events, especially for 2019. Evaluation of the deterministic and ensemble rainfall predictions revealed systematic rainfall differences over the Ghats mountains and the coastline. The ensemble predictions were more skillful than the deterministic forecasts, as they were able to predict rainfall anomalies (greater than three standard deviations from climatology) beyond day 5 for August 2019 and up to day 3 for 2018.

Full access