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Subject: F6) How accurate are the forecasts from the National
Hurricane Center?
Contributed by Chris Landsea and Miles Lawrence
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) issues an official forecast,
every six hours, of the center position, maximum one-minute surface
(10 meter [33 ft] elevation) wind speed (intensity), and radii of
the 34 knot (39 mph,63 kph), 50 knot (58 mph,92 kph), and 64 knot
(74 mph,117 kph) wind speeds in four quadrants (northeast, southeast,
southwest, and northwest) surrounding the cyclone. The NHC has been
issuing predictions for the forecast periods of 12, 24, 36, 48, and
72 hours since 1964. Forecasts for 12 and 24 hours were first issued
in 1954. In 2003, the forecasts were extended and now include 96 and
120 hours. All official forecast are verified by comparison with the
"best track", a set of six-hour center positions and maximum wind
speed values, that represents the official NHC estimate of the
location and intensity of a tropical cyclone. A best track is
prepared for every tropical cyclone, after the fact, using all
available data.
Fig. 1Yearly-average official track forecast
errors for 24-, 48-, 72-, 96-, and 120-hours, Atlantic basin,
excluding depressions. Straight lines are linear trend lines with all
yearly-averages weighted equally. The official track error data
includes all official forecasts issued since 1954.
NHC's official track errors have averaged in the last few years
about 85 nmi (100 st. miles,160 km) at 24 hr, 140 nmi
(160 st. miles,260 km) at 48 hr and 200 nmi (230 st. miles,370 km)
at 72 hr. One can see that NHC has even done better than these
numbers during 2003. Forecasts are now also issued at 4 and 5 days
lead time and these are likely to have an average error of
about 250 nmi (290 st. miles,460 km) and 300 nmi (350 st. miles,
550 km), respectively. These are average errors so, of course,
individual predictions may be substantially better or worse. It is
to the National Hurricane Center's credit (and NOAA in general) that
these predictions have gotten so much better in the last few
decades, due to a combintation of more accurate numerical models,
more observations over the open ocean, and a better understanding
of the physics of hurricane movement. Today a 3 day forecast is
as accurate as those issued for a 2 day prediction in the late
1980s.
Fig.2 Yearly-average official intensity forecast
errors for 24-, 48-, 72-, 96-, and 120-hours, Atlantic basin,
excluding depressions. Straight lines are linear trend lines with all
yearly-averages weighted equally.
NHC's wind intensity errors have averaged recently about 9 kt
(10 mph,17 kph) at a 24 hr forecast, 15 kt (17 mph,28 kph) at
a 48 hr forecast, and 19 kt (22 mph,35 kph) at a 72 hr forecast.
The 4 and 5 day predictions should average about 21 kt (24 mph,39 kph)
and 22 kt (25 mph,41 kph). (One comparison of the ability of the
long-range forecasts is to consider that a simple prediction of a
constant value of 60 kt (70 mph,110 kph) gives an error of about
23 kt (26 mph,43 kph), so forecasts with errors close to this value
have little to no skill.) One does see that the intensity forecasts
have improved somewhat at 1 and 2 day predictions - 48 hr forecasts
today have errors that are 20% smaller than they were in the mid-1970s.
However, the improvements are much slower than in the track predictions
and the 3 day forecasts of intensity have not gotten substantially
better at all. Much work still remains to better understand and
predict wind intensity changes in tropical storms and hurricanes.
Tropical cyclone size (that is, the radius of high winds) has been
been forecasted by NHC for several years, though the first
quantitative verifications have been provided just recently. These
suggest that the errors in predicting the radius of gale force winds
(34 kt,39 mph,63 kph) averages about 20 nmi (25 st. miles,35 km) at a
24 hr forecast, about 25 nmi (30 st. miles,45 km) at a 48 hr forecast,
and about 30 nmi (35 st. miles,55 km) at a 72 hr forecast.
Last updated August 13, 2004
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