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Creation of ER-M-Climate

The ER-M-Climate is derived from a set of extended range re-forecasts created using the same calendar start dates over several years for data times either side of the time of the extended ensemble run itself.  The re-forecast runs are at the same resolution as the extended medium range run itself and run over the 46-day extended range ENS period. 

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  • extended range forecast verification metrics are based on the re-forecasts.
  • re-forecasts allow computation of the ER-M-climate which allows actual forecasts to be converted into an anomaly format.   Forecasts in terms of anomalies relative to a model climate (rather than relative to the observed climatology) mean that some calibration for model bias and drift into the products is incorporated.

Selection of extended range re-forecasts

The set of re-forecasts is based on using the three consecutive dates surrounding the day and month of the extended ENS run in question.  Re-forecasts are created using the same calendar start dates for each of the last 20 years.  

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  • to present the day15 to day46 ensemble meteograms with the extended range climate (ER-M-climate).
  • to highlight significant anomalies of forecast 2m temperature, wind speed, cloudiness and precipitation from the norm for a given location and time of year.  

Different reference periods for M-Climate and ER-M-Climate

ECMWF uses different reference periods but essentially the same re-forecast runs to build the M-Climate and the ER-M-Climate.   The key difference is that those runs are grouped and used in different ways:  

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