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A Streamflow Forecasting Framework using Multiple Climate and Hydrological Models1
Authors:Paul J Block  Francisco Assis Souza Filho  Liqiang Sun  Hyun‐Han Kwon
Institution:1. Respectively Associate Research Scientist, Research Scientist (Block, Sun), International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI), Columbia University, Lamont Campus, 61 Route 9W, Monell Building, Palisades, New York 10964;2. Professor (Souza Filho), Federal University of Ceará, Fortaleza, Brazil;3. Senior Researcher (Kwon), Korea Institute of Construction Technology, Goyang‐Si, Korea
Abstract:Abstract: Water resources planning and management efficacy is subject to capturing inherent uncertainties stemming from climatic and hydrological inputs and models. Streamflow forecasts, critical in reservoir operation and water allocation decision making, fundamentally contain uncertainties arising from assumed initial conditions, model structure, and modeled processes. Accounting for these propagating uncertainties remains a formidable challenge. Recent enhancements in climate forecasting skill and hydrological modeling serve as an impetus for further pursuing models and model combinations capable of delivering improved streamflow forecasts. However, little consideration has been given to methodologies that include coupling both multiple climate and multiple hydrological models, increasing the pool of streamflow forecast ensemble members and accounting for cumulative sources of uncertainty. The framework presented here proposes integration and offline coupling of global climate models (GCMs), multiple regional climate models, and numerous water balance models to improve streamflow forecasting through generation of ensemble forecasts. For demonstration purposes, the framework is imposed on the Jaguaribe basin in northeastern Brazil for a hindcast of 1974‐1996 monthly streamflow. The ECHAM 4.5 and the NCEP/MRF9 GCMs and regional models, including dynamical and statistical models, are integrated with the ABCD and Soil Moisture Accounting Procedure water balance models. Precipitation hindcasts from the GCMs are downscaled via the regional models and fed into the water balance models, producing streamflow hindcasts. Multi‐model ensemble combination techniques include pooling, linear regression weighting, and a kernel density estimator to evaluate streamflow hindcasts; the latter technique exhibits superior skill compared with any single coupled model ensemble hindcast.
Keywords:surface water hydrology  precipitation  computational methods  streamflow  forecast  uncertainty  multi‐model  ensemble  Brazil
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