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M-climate is only re-created each Monday and Thursday.  This can have a small detrimental impact upon the Extreme Forecast Index extreme forecast index (EFI) and Shift shift of Tails tails (SOT) valuesvalues, particularly in spring and autumn when day-to-day climatic changes are at their greatest.

  In Fig 5.3.3, the apparent decrease of the magnitude of the EFI during the sequence of forecasts for data times 00UTC 05 May to 12UTC 08 May is a response to a change in the M-climate with lead time.  Inland regions at higher latitudes warm quite rapidly in springtime and the M-climate 2 m temperatures rise steadily with increasing forecast lead time.  Therefore a forecast 2m temperature for five days ahead, though realistic, may appear significantly colder than the corresponding M-climate value for five days ahead and justify a high EFI.  However, the same forecast 2 m temperature for one day ahead will not appear quite so significantly colder than the cooler M-climate value for one day ahead.  Thus the EFI signal may become less negative and therefore less extreme even though the ENS ensemble forecast remains identical from one day to the next.   The example shown is fairly extreme with SOT values nearing -1. 

Forecasts from data times of 00UTC and 12UTC use the same M-climate lead time for each day ahead and the M-climate frames alter with every second frame of the EFI frame.   But the final forecast in the sequence, data time DT 00UTC 09 May, used an updated M-climate as the basis for EFI and SOT computation.  On the last two M-climate framesthe M-climate based on 4 May is replaced by that based on 8 May, shown by the dark green boundary receding significantly to the north because the new M-Climate's focus is slightly later in the year.  This means that if the ENS 2m temp forecast stays the same it will once again appear more extreme and this is shown with a return to a larger negative EFI value.

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Fig 5.3.3: The frame on the left shows a sequence Extreme Forecast Index (EFI) and Shift of Tails (SOT) charts from ENS ensemble forecasts at 12hr intervals with data times from 00UTC 05 May to 00UTC 09 May all for the same 24hr period 00UTC 09 May to 00UTC 10 May 2017.  Large negative EFI values (Dark Blue, Purple) give strong indication of a significantly cold event compared with corresponding M-climate climatology (shown in the frame on the right).  However, the large negative EFI values (Purple) from forecasts several days ago gradually become less extreme and less extensive (Dark Blues) before returning to large negative EFI values (Purple) on the last forecast.  This is because M-climate has been recalculated reflecting the progressively warmer springtime temperatures experienced in the past.  The forecast temperatures, though not significantly lower than previous forecasts, now appear significantly lower and more extreme compared with the latest M-climate. 

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