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The Second Wind Forecast Improvement Project (WFIP2): General Overview

Authors :
Melinda Marquis
Justin Sharp
Jim McCaa
William J. Shaw
Joel Cline
Chitra Sivaraman
James M. Wilczak
Eric P. Grimit
Caroline Draxl
Larry K. Berg
Julie K. Lundquist
Joseph B. Olson
Irina Djalalova
Source :
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 100:1687-1699
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2019.

Abstract

In 2015 the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) initiated a 4-yr study, the Second Wind Forecast Improvement Project (WFIP2), to improve the representation of boundary layer physics and related processes in mesoscale models for better treatment of scales applicable to wind and wind power forecasts. This goal challenges numerical weather prediction (NWP) models in complex terrain in large part because of inherent assumptions underlying their boundary layer parameterizations. The WFIP2 effort involved the wind industry, universities, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the DOE’s national laboratories in an integrated observational and modeling study. Observations spanned 18 months to assure a full annual cycle of continuously recorded observations from remote sensing and in situ measurement systems. The study area comprised the Columbia basin of eastern Washington and Oregon, containing more than 6 GW of installed wind capacity. Nests of observational systems captured important atmospheric scales from mesoscale to NWP subgrid scale. Model improvements targeted NOAA’s High-Resolution Rapid Refresh (HRRR) model to facilitate transfer of improvements to National Weather Service (NWS) operational forecast models, and these modifications have already yielded quantitative improvements for the short-term operational forecasts. This paper describes the general WFIP2 scope and objectives, the particular scientific challenges of improving wind forecasts in complex terrain, early successes of the project, and an integrated approach to archiving observations and model output. It provides an introduction for a set of more detailedBAMSpapers addressing WFIP2 observational science, modeling challenges and solutions, incorporation of forecasting uncertainty into decision support tools for the wind industry, and advances in coupling improved mesoscale models to microscale models that can represent interactions between wind plants and the atmosphere.

Details

ISSN :
15200477 and 00030007
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........13b28fb8f9c3aa48fbde7ca84e5530e2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1175/bams-d-18-0036.1