@article{Dasgupta-2023-Connecting,
title = "Connecting hydrological modelling and forecasting from global to local scales: Perspectives from an international joint virtual workshop",
author = "Dasgupta, Antara and
Arnal, Louise and
Emerton, Rebecca and
Harrigan, Shaun and
Matthews, Gwyneth and
Muhammad, Ameer and
O{'}Regan, Karen and
P{\'e}rez‐Ciria, Teresa and
Valdez, Emixi and
Osnabrugge, Bart van and
Werner, Micha and
Buontempo, Carlo and
Cloke, Hannah and
Pappenberger, Florian and
Pechlivanidis, Ilias and
Prudhomme, Christel and
Ramos, Maria‐Helena and
Salamon, Peter and
Dasgupta, Antara and
Arnal, Louise and
Emerton, Rebecca and
Harrigan, Shaun and
Matthews, Gwyneth and
Muhammad, Ameer and
O{'}Regan, Karen and
P{\'e}rez‐Ciria, Teresa and
Valdez, Emixi and
Osnabrugge, Bart van and
Werner, Micha and
Buontempo, Carlo and
Cloke, Hannah and
Pappenberger, Florian and
Pechlivanidis, Ilias and
Prudhomme, Christel and
Ramos, Maria‐Helena and
Salamon, Peter",
journal = "Journal of Flood Risk Management",
year = "2023",
publisher = "Wiley",
url = "https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G23-37001",
doi = "10.1111/jfr3.12880",
abstract = "Abstract The unprecedented progress in ensemble hydro‐meteorological modelling and forecasting on a range of temporal and spatial scales, raises a variety of new challenges which formed the theme of the Joint Virtual Workshop, {`}Connecting global to local hydrological modelling and forecasting: challenges and scientific advances{'}. Held from 29 June to 1 July 2021, this workshop was co‐organised by the European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), the Copernicus Emergency Management (CEMS) and Climate Change (C3S) Services, the Hydrological Ensemble Prediction EXperiment (HEPEX), and the Global Flood Partnership (GFP). This article aims to summarise the state‐of‐the‐art presented at the workshop and provide an early career perspective. Recent advances in hydrological modelling and forecasting, reflections on the use of forecasts for decision‐making across scales, and means to minimise new barriers to communication in the virtual format are also discussed. Thematic foci of the workshop included hydrological model development and skill assessment, uncertainty communication, forecasts for early action, co‐production of services and incorporation of local knowledge, Earth observation, and data assimilation. Connecting hydrological services to societal needs and local decision‐making through effective communication, capacity‐building and co‐production was identified as critical. Multidisciplinary collaborations emerged as crucial to effectively bring newly developed tools to practice.",
}
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<abstract>Abstract The unprecedented progress in ensemble hydro‐meteorological modelling and forecasting on a range of temporal and spatial scales, raises a variety of new challenges which formed the theme of the Joint Virtual Workshop, ‘Connecting global to local hydrological modelling and forecasting: challenges and scientific advances’. Held from 29 June to 1 July 2021, this workshop was co‐organised by the European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), the Copernicus Emergency Management (CEMS) and Climate Change (C3S) Services, the Hydrological Ensemble Prediction EXperiment (HEPEX), and the Global Flood Partnership (GFP). This article aims to summarise the state‐of‐the‐art presented at the workshop and provide an early career perspective. Recent advances in hydrological modelling and forecasting, reflections on the use of forecasts for decision‐making across scales, and means to minimise new barriers to communication in the virtual format are also discussed. Thematic foci of the workshop included hydrological model development and skill assessment, uncertainty communication, forecasts for early action, co‐production of services and incorporation of local knowledge, Earth observation, and data assimilation. Connecting hydrological services to societal needs and local decision‐making through effective communication, capacity‐building and co‐production was identified as critical. Multidisciplinary collaborations emerged as crucial to effectively bring newly developed tools to practice.</abstract>
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%0 Journal Article
%T Connecting hydrological modelling and forecasting from global to local scales: Perspectives from an international joint virtual workshop
%A Dasgupta, Antara
%A Arnal, Louise
%A Emerton, Rebecca
%A Harrigan, Shaun
%A Matthews, Gwyneth
%A Muhammad, Ameer
%A O’Regan, Karen
%A Pérez‐Ciria, Teresa
%A Valdez, Emixi
%A Osnabrugge, Bart van
%A Werner, Micha
%A Buontempo, Carlo
%A Cloke, Hannah
%A Pappenberger, Florian
%A Pechlivanidis, Ilias
%A Prudhomme, Christel
%A Ramos, Maria‐Helena
%A Salamon, Peter
%J Journal of Flood Risk Management
%D 2023
%I Wiley
%F Dasgupta-2023-Connecting
%X Abstract The unprecedented progress in ensemble hydro‐meteorological modelling and forecasting on a range of temporal and spatial scales, raises a variety of new challenges which formed the theme of the Joint Virtual Workshop, ‘Connecting global to local hydrological modelling and forecasting: challenges and scientific advances’. Held from 29 June to 1 July 2021, this workshop was co‐organised by the European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), the Copernicus Emergency Management (CEMS) and Climate Change (C3S) Services, the Hydrological Ensemble Prediction EXperiment (HEPEX), and the Global Flood Partnership (GFP). This article aims to summarise the state‐of‐the‐art presented at the workshop and provide an early career perspective. Recent advances in hydrological modelling and forecasting, reflections on the use of forecasts for decision‐making across scales, and means to minimise new barriers to communication in the virtual format are also discussed. Thematic foci of the workshop included hydrological model development and skill assessment, uncertainty communication, forecasts for early action, co‐production of services and incorporation of local knowledge, Earth observation, and data assimilation. Connecting hydrological services to societal needs and local decision‐making through effective communication, capacity‐building and co‐production was identified as critical. Multidisciplinary collaborations emerged as crucial to effectively bring newly developed tools to practice.
%R 10.1111/jfr3.12880
%U https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G23-37001
%U https://doi.org/10.1111/jfr3.12880
Markdown (Informal)
[Connecting hydrological modelling and forecasting from global to local scales: Perspectives from an international joint virtual workshop](https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G23-37001) (Dasgupta et al., GWF 2023)
ACL
- Antara Dasgupta, Louise Arnal, Rebecca Emerton, Shaun Harrigan, Gwyneth Matthews, Ameer Muhammad, Karen O’Regan, Teresa Pérez‐Ciria, Emixi Valdez, Bart van Osnabrugge, Micha Werner, Carlo Buontempo, Hannah Cloke, Florian Pappenberger, Ilias Pechlivanidis, Christel Prudhomme, Maria‐Helena Ramos, Peter Salamon, Antara Dasgupta, et al.. 2023. Connecting hydrological modelling and forecasting from global to local scales: Perspectives from an international joint virtual workshop. Journal of Flood Risk Management.