Climate Monitoring
Climate Forecasts
Climate Forecast Verifications
Forecast Methodologies
Research
Software Tools
Highlights Archive
Climate Program

Climate Program

 
Climate Program
NASA

Although we do not act specifically as an operational climate center, our aim is to assist those responsible for providing operational climate information, such as National Meteorological Services and Regional Climate Centers in developing countries. We do this through capacity-building activities and by developing tools to assist them in their climate service responsibilities. The Climate Predictability Tool (CPT) for example, is specifically designed to assist National Meteorological Services to produce their own tailored, downscaled seasonal climate forecasts, either using global datasets (such as sea temperature measurements) or dynamical model outputs from the WMO’s Global Producing Centres.

The Climate Program has four divisions:

  • Dynamical Modelling
  • Global Prediction (Leader: Mike Tippett)
  • Downscaling (Leader: Andy Robertson)
  • Climate Diagnostics (Leader: Lisa Goddard)

The Climate Program works closely with sectoral experts in health, water resources, agriculture and disaster management, to identify areas in which climate information can be used for decision making and planning and to ensure that the information is tailored to the needs of the users.

To achieve its goal the Climate Program has identified the following objectives:

  1. Develop and demonstrate expertise across the range of scientifically credible forecast and monitoring methodologies used by operational centers around the world;
  2. Develop new products (as well as improve existing ones) to generate and to meet demand for climate information;
  3. Define and implement international standards for generating and communicating climate information;
  4. Enable operational climate centers to provide climate information by developing software tools and supporting materials that encapsulate best practices for generating such information.

Highlights
 
IRI activities with NOAA-CPC African Desk meteorologists
Maher Ben Mansour (National Institute of Meteorology in Tunisia) and Peter Omeny (Kenya Meteorological Department, and 2008 Summer Institute alum) participated in the latest of IRI's regularly-hosted training sessions for NOAA-CPC African Desk visitors. One of the goals of the African Desk is to build capacity in climate monitoring and prediction in developing countries through interagency and international cooperation. IRI's program for the week-long training, held from 7 - 11 March, included lectures and practical exercises on topics such as seasonal forecasting, downscaling and tailoring, climate risk management for agriculture, water and health, and environmental monitoring. IRI staff who facilitated these activities were Tony Banston, Simon Mason, Andrew Robertson, Tara Troy, Judy Omumbo, Michael Bell, Amor Ines and Pietro Ceccato. For more on NOAA's CPC African Desk, click here.  

The recent decline of the long rains in East Africa
Brad Lyon presented on the dynamics of the post-1998 decline in March-April-May East Africa rainfall at the 91st American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, in January 2011. His talk (with Dave DeWitt), part of the 23rd Conference on Climate Variability and Change, is available here.  

Climate Group research presented at 2010 AGU Fall Meeting
Research by IRI's Climate Group presented at AGU included talks by L. Goddard, Systematic Biases in Regional Climate Change Projections; A. Greene, Utility of stochastic decadal simulations in water resource planning; and J. Qian, How Useful Are Regional Climate Models For Downscaling Seasonal Forecasts?. Posters were presented by P. Gonzalez, A Framework for the Development of Multi-scale Regional Climate Information; D. Lee, Analyzing the Seasonal Errors of the Upper Indian Ocean Temperature with NCEP-CFS forecasts; and J. Qian, Predictability of Rice Production in the Philippines with Seasonal Climate Forecasts.  

Content Search Page
Content Search Page
Climate Program 1-pager Icon
Climate Program 1-Pager
 
The IRI was established as a cooperative agreement between NOAA's Climate Program Office and Columbia University. It is part of The Earth Institute at Columbia University, and is located at the Lamont Campus.