Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UK

<p>Improved skill of long-range weather forecasts has motivated an increasing effort towards developing seasonal hydrological forecasting systems across Europe. Among other purposes, such forecasting systems are expected to support better water management decisions. In this paper we evaluate t...

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Main Authors: A. Peñuela, C. Hutton, F. Pianosi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2020-12-01
Series:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Online Access:https://hess.copernicus.org/articles/24/6059/2020/hess-24-6059-2020.pdf
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spelling doaj-7814e51da2a447d98a03a1aae97bddd62020-12-23T07:02:23ZengCopernicus PublicationsHydrology and Earth System Sciences1027-56061607-79382020-12-01246059607310.5194/hess-24-6059-2020Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UKA. Peñuela0C. Hutton1F. Pianosi2F. Pianosi3Civil Engineering, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1TR, UKWessex Water Services Ltd, Bath, BA2 7WW, UKCivil Engineering, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1TR, UKCabot Institute, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1UH, UK<p>Improved skill of long-range weather forecasts has motivated an increasing effort towards developing seasonal hydrological forecasting systems across Europe. Among other purposes, such forecasting systems are expected to support better water management decisions. In this paper we evaluate the potential use of a real-time optimization system (RTOS) informed by seasonal forecasts in a water supply system in the UK. For this purpose, we simulate the performances of the RTOS fed by ECMWF seasonal forecasting systems (SEAS5) over the past 10 years, and we compare them to a benchmark operation that mimics the common practices for reservoir operation in the UK. We also attempt to link the improvement of system performances, i.e. the forecast value, to the forecast skill (measured by the mean error and the continuous ranked probability skill score) as well as to the bias correction of the meteorological forcing, the decision maker priorities, the hydrological conditions and the forecast ensemble size. We find that in particular the decision maker priorities and the hydrological conditions exert a strong influence on the forecast skill–value relationship. For the (realistic) scenario where the decision maker prioritizes the water resource availability over energy cost reductions, we identify clear operational benefits from using seasonal forecasts, provided that forecast uncertainty is explicitly considered by optimizing against an ensemble of 25 equiprobable forecasts. These operational benefits are also observed when the ensemble size is reduced up to a certain limit. However, when comparing the use of ECMWF-SEAS5 products to ensemble streamflow prediction (ESP), which is more easily derived from historical weather data, we find that ESP remains a hard-to-beat reference, not only in terms of skill but also in terms of value.</p>https://hess.copernicus.org/articles/24/6059/2020/hess-24-6059-2020.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Peñuela
C. Hutton
F. Pianosi
F. Pianosi
spellingShingle A. Peñuela
C. Hutton
F. Pianosi
F. Pianosi
Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UK
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
author_facet A. Peñuela
C. Hutton
F. Pianosi
F. Pianosi
author_sort A. Peñuela
title Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UK
title_short Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UK
title_full Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UK
title_fullStr Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UK
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the UK
title_sort assessing the value of seasonal hydrological forecasts for improving water resource management: insights from a pilot application in the uk
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
issn 1027-5606
1607-7938
publishDate 2020-12-01
description <p>Improved skill of long-range weather forecasts has motivated an increasing effort towards developing seasonal hydrological forecasting systems across Europe. Among other purposes, such forecasting systems are expected to support better water management decisions. In this paper we evaluate the potential use of a real-time optimization system (RTOS) informed by seasonal forecasts in a water supply system in the UK. For this purpose, we simulate the performances of the RTOS fed by ECMWF seasonal forecasting systems (SEAS5) over the past 10 years, and we compare them to a benchmark operation that mimics the common practices for reservoir operation in the UK. We also attempt to link the improvement of system performances, i.e. the forecast value, to the forecast skill (measured by the mean error and the continuous ranked probability skill score) as well as to the bias correction of the meteorological forcing, the decision maker priorities, the hydrological conditions and the forecast ensemble size. We find that in particular the decision maker priorities and the hydrological conditions exert a strong influence on the forecast skill–value relationship. For the (realistic) scenario where the decision maker prioritizes the water resource availability over energy cost reductions, we identify clear operational benefits from using seasonal forecasts, provided that forecast uncertainty is explicitly considered by optimizing against an ensemble of 25 equiprobable forecasts. These operational benefits are also observed when the ensemble size is reduced up to a certain limit. However, when comparing the use of ECMWF-SEAS5 products to ensemble streamflow prediction (ESP), which is more easily derived from historical weather data, we find that ESP remains a hard-to-beat reference, not only in terms of skill but also in terms of value.</p>
url https://hess.copernicus.org/articles/24/6059/2020/hess-24-6059-2020.pdf
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