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Met Office science strategy 2010–2015 Unified science and modelling for unified prediction Integrating our research and prediction capabilities to deliver world-leading weather and climate services Summary This document outlines the top-level science strategy for the Met Office, which responds to the increasing demand for seamless prediction systems across all timescales, from hours to decades, and for the atmosphere, oceans and land surface. It recognises the unique position of the Met Office in having world-class weather forecasting and climate prediction in one place. Exploiting the benefits of those synergies between the science and modelling of weather, oceans and climate, lies at the heart of this strategy. The strategy takes the new agenda of seamless science and prediction and focuses the Met Office research agenda around four major science challenges: (i) forecasting hazardous weather from hours to decades; (ii) water cycle and quantitative precipitation forecasting on all scales; (iii) monthly to decadal prediction in a changing climate; and (iv) sensitivity of the Earth system to human activities. It is advocated that an increasing emphasis on higher resolution modelling, a focus on research into processes and phenomena in the ocean-atmosphere-land-cryosphere system, and an enhanced use of Earth observation are the necessary scientific foundations for tackling these challenges. A new research structure is therefore proposed, aimed at delivering efficiencies and accelerating progress, and setting in place mechanisms for greater integration and innovation in the science base. The strategy also considers other elements that are required to maintain the Met Office as a world-leading scientific organisation. These include a more strategic approach to partnerships, both nationally and internationally, delivery of the necessary infrastructure for research and services, improved processes for staff recruitment and development, and better methods for communicating and disseminating our science. 1. Context In the past, the separation between weather and climate research has been essential and understandable because numerical weather prediction was far more advanced and sophisticated and because the science of climate prediction was relatively immature. That is increasingly no longer the case. With the growing appreciation of the importance of hazardous weather in driving some of the most profound impacts of climate variability and change, and with the developing interest in monthly to decadal forecasts from users, there is a clear need for a more seamless approach to modelling and prediction. At the same time observations of the Earth system, especially from space, are providing ever-increasing information about the current state of the full system, essential for initialising climate forecasts. Climate science is now sufficiently mature that providing a structured operational delivery of climate forecasts, to underpin a wide range of services, is a logical development. Over the last decade or so, predicting the weather and climate has emerged as one of the most important areas of scientific endeavour. This is partly because the remarkable increase in skill of current weather forecasts has made society more and more dependent on them day to day for a whole range of decision making. And it is partly because climate change is now widely accepted and the realisation is growing rapidly that it will affect every person in the world profoundly, either directly or indirectly. The challenge for the Met Office is to remain at the cuttingedge of modelling and predicting the evolution of the atmosphere, oceans and fully coupled climate system. This will provide an increasingly accurate and reliable service across all sectors that are vulnerable to the effects of adverse weather and climatic conditions, whether now or in the future. Seamless forecasting services Forecast lead-time Observations and past data Day Hour Week Month Season Year Decade Century Mitigation policies Infrastructure planning Homeland & international security Adaptation strategies Regulator standards Financial & property portfolio risk management Climate vulnerability analysis Investment strategy Aid agencies & international development Market trading Maintenance planning Scenario planning Insurance/re-insurance hazards Resource planning: energy, water, food Operations planning Disruption planning Weather warnings Emergency response Proposed seamless forecasting system and related services. 01 The Met Office is uniquely placed to deliver the proposed seamless approach since it has world-class capabilities in weather and climate prediction. It has a modelling system that can span all the scales of interest from the individual cloud to the whole globe, and one that can increasingly include all components of the system — ocean, land, ecosystems and ice. This means that the same science and modelling can potentially be applied to forecasting tomorrow’s weather as it can to predicting what the statistics of weather — especially hazardous weather — may be like ten or 100 years from now. One of the key strengths of the Met Office is the direct pullthrough of research into improved products and services. Access to core scientific expertise is vital for delivering the best service to our customers. Similarly, understanding the needs of our customers enriches the science we do. A major factor in our success as an organisation has been the integration of core and applied research. As the climate changes and societies’ needs for weather and climate information grow, it will be crucial that we maintain that dialogue to ensure that our investment in long-term, strategic research is made wisely. In achieving a more unified and seamless approach, the Met Office is likely to realise some significant advantages and efficiencies in its science, model development and underpinning technical capabilities. With appropriate reorganisation to build on the synergies between weather forecasting and climate prediction, and between core and applied research, the Met Office will be in the best possible position to take a world lead in weather and climate services. It is this that has set the context for the proposed restructuring of Met Office research and development (R&D). 2. Drivers of change There are a number of drivers of change — both external and internal — which make a new strategy essential for the Met Office to deliver the best weather and climate services, most effectively and efficiently. These drivers reflect the changing nature of international weather and climate science and the services that society demands, the challenges of acquiring the levels of supercomputing needed to deliver that science, and the undoubted funding pressures on the Met Office in the coming years. These will require us to be more efficient and to look beyond the Met Office for the intellectual and technical capability and capacity that we’ll need. In the last few years, two major factors have served to bring about revolutions in weather forecasting and climate prediction, and to increasingly erode the traditional boundaries between weather and climate science. 02 The first is access to increasing computer power which has enabled much higher resolution to be used in modelling. For weather forecasting this has meant the ability to run operational models at cloud system resolving scale (~1 km). This has the potential to deliver a step change in our ability to forecast the likelihood and location of extreme weather events, especially heavy rainfall. The capability to run models at very high resolution has also reinvigorated the concept of computational laboratories for the explicit modelling of key processes and interactions in the atmosphere, which will be critical for improving physical parametrizations. For climate prediction, increased computing power has meant that it is now possible to perform simulations which represent synoptic weather systems more accurately (~50 km) and are closer to the global resolutions used in weather forecasting. At the same time, the resolution of the ocean models (~1/4°) is beginning to capture the effects of eddies and is approaching that used in ocean forecasting. The second factor is the realisation that we are already in the position where some level of climate change is unavoidable and that society will need to adapt sooner rather than later. Even without climate change, society is increasingly vulnerable to hazardous weather and natural climate variability. This means that information is required not at a global scale, but at a regional and local scale and increasingly for lead-times of months to decades rather than for the end of the century. At the same time, there is a growing awareness that the most serious impacts of climate change will be felt through changes in rainfall patterns, extremes of climate variability, and the intensity and frequency of hazardous weather events. This new agenda is revolutionising climate science and prediction, and the urgency of the problem is requiring an increasingly operational delivery of climate services. This is recognised by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and was addressed by the 3rd World Climate Conference (WCC-3) held in 2009, the key outcome of which is to establish a Global Framework for Climate Services. Both factors, increased computing power, and the new international agenda for seamless prediction and climate services, make a more unified approach to weather forecasting and climate prediction practical and desirable, and are therefore important drivers of change in the focus and structure of the Met Office Science Programme. Finally, the expansion of our service provision to include the Climate Service will mean more investment in applied research in order to provide the new products and services. This means there must be greater alignment of research across weather and climate science, and continuing efforts to seek synergies and rationalisation in the products and services we provide. All these internal factors are drivers of change if we are to deliver to our full potential within the likely budgetary constraints. 3. Science imperatives Complex fluid-flows in the atmosphere and oceans are a fundamental feature of the Earth system. They transport energy, momentum, and material substances within and between system components. These flows occur over a wide range of spatial scales, and evolve over a wide range of timescales. ‘Small’ scales of motion that are known to be important cannot be simulated directly in global models on current computers and must therefore be parametrized in terms of resolved scales. A clear imperative is to develop models of much higher resolution so as to be able to simulate explicitly flows down to smaller scales and to capture potential non-linear interactions between different space and time scales, and between different components of the Earth system. This brings further benefits in terms of exploiting the wealth of information in Earth observation systems through more advanced data assimilation systems and model evaluation. It will be vital that our modelling capability is underpinned by the ongoing provision of weather and climate observations of sufficient quality to initialise predictions, evaluate forecast skill and monitor changes in the climate system. We know that building higher resolution models is necessary for advancing weather and climate prediction capabilities, but increased resolution alone is not sufficient. At all resolutions, a continuing effort to improve the parametrizations of subgrid scale processes in both the atmosphere and oceans is an absolute imperative. This requires maintaining our skills in combining theory, observations and modelling to understand how the atmosphere and oceans work and how sub-grid scale processes should be represented. Long-term vision for delivering local information on the likelihood and characteristics of hazardous weather for all forecast leadtimes N x Global predictions at ~20km with lead times of days to years The increasingly challenging nature of the science that underpins our observational, modelling and prediction activities is an important driver of change. The Met Office will need to be in a position with its partners to drive the science forward on many fronts in order to tackle what we regard as the four major challenges to which the Met Office must respond in the coming decade. All transcend the boundaries between weather and climate science, and thus drive us towards a more integrated approach to our research. These can be summarised as follows. 3.1 Forecasting hazardous weather from hours to decades Hazardous weather covers not just intense rainfall and damaging winds, but also heatwaves, poor air quality and coastal impacts, such as storm surges. Whether it be forecasting the local detail a few hours or a few days ahead, or whether it be assessing what climate change may mean for the frequency and intensity of such weather events in future decades, the science that underpins our understanding and ability to model hazardous weather will be common across all timescales. Improving forecasts of hazardous weather requires moving to much higher resolution in all our models, on all timescales. In weather forecasting from a few hours to a day or so ahead, it means coming down to the local level so that fundamental atmospheric processes, such as cumulus convection, and the local landscape are represented more completely. For coastal regions there may be real benefits from including an interactive coastal ocean in the model. <N x Regional predictions at ~1km PDF of local hazard 03 Example of a cloud system resolving simulation showing multi-scale organisation of clouds and weather systems (Courtesy: Earth Simulator Centre, Yokohama, Japan). Defining the initial conditions for local forecasts, how to use more unconventional observations and develop the observational base, such as radar and lidar, and how these can be linked to variables within the model, all present new challenges. At these scales, especially in convective situations, even a forecast for a few hours ahead will need to be probabilistic in formulation. For forecast lead-times beyond 2–3 days, the skill of the global forecast will be critical in setting the context for hazardous weather. This will require continued investment in global data assimilation research to exploit new Earth observations, continued reduction in model biases, especially in the Tropics and related to tropical convection, by developing improved sub-grid scale parametrizations, and a concerted effort to move to higher resolution both horizontally and vertically. In climate prediction, providing robust information on the statistics of future hazardous weather at regional and local levels means moving to global model resolutions that capture synoptic weather systems with greater fidelity, much as is needed in global weather forecasting. At the same time, we must understand more fully the weather and climate regimes in which hazardous weather forms, such as El Niño cycles and its global teleconnections, and extra-tropical phenomena such as blocking and the North Atlantic Oscillation. This means that our global weather and climate models must be more skilful at representing weather regimes and global teleconnections. There will continue to be a need to downscale global and regional climate information to the local level, however much the resolution of our prediction models improves. Again, the expertise developed in local weather forecasting for the UK can be carried through into informing how to downscale regional climate predictions. The implementation of the 1.5 km UKV1 forecast model has already demonstrated a step change in capturing extreme weather events, especially intense rainfall. Our strategy is to bring together regional modelling capabilities across weather and climate to exploit the synergies and deliver benefits. Finally, in both weather forecasting and climate prediction, how hazardous weather translates into effects on society requires much closer integration with the impacts community. We are already experienced in the applied science of translating weather forecasts into user-driven products and services. In many cases, the same concepts and methodologies can be taken through into the climate area, thus realising the significant benefits of the joint presence of weather forecasting and climate prediction within the Met Office. Recommendations: • To pursue an aggressive strategy of increasing model resolution both horizontally and vertically and developing improved parametrizations of sub-grid scale processes, within the constraints of available computing resources. • To exploit more fully our capability for local weather nowcasting and forecasting, by improving the methods for initialising, and for performing and interpreting probabilistic predictions with UKV model. • To increase our understanding of the large-scale context of hazardous weather and to improve the ability of global models to capture those key weather and climate regimes. • To develop a joined-up approach to the applied science of translating hazardous weather into societal impacts at the regional and local level. 3.2 Water cycle and quantitative precipitation forecasting Water is a fundamental ingredient of the Earth system, supporting plant, animal and marine life. Water vapour constitutes the Earth’s most abundant and important greenhouse gas, and water in its various forms (vapour, liquid, solid) determines the characteristics and spatiotemporal evolution of the Earth system. Latent heat release from precipitation, particularly in the Tropics, is a major driver of the global circulation, which acts to transport heat, moisture and momentum around the climate system. Natural ecosystems depend on precipitation, and so water has a fundamental role to play in other cycles of the Earth system such as the carbon and nitrogen cycles. The atmospheric water cycle is the driving force of weather and climate, and the spatial and temporal characteristics of precipitation — too much, too little, at the wrong time, in the wrong place — have profound effects on all aspects of life. Despite decades of research, quantitative precipitation forecasting (QPF) remains an enormous challenge. In mid-latitudes, rain-bearing systems are typically synoptic or finer in scale and this presents particular constraints on the resolution of the modelling systems we must use. Significant advances have been achieved recently with the development of the UKV model. This has the potential to provide better guidance on the intensity of precipitation, especially in situations with strong synoptic forcing, as was the case for the Cockermouth floods in November 2009. However, considerable research is still required on the initiation of convective storms and on how to include the stochastic nature 1 Variable resolution regional model with 1.5km resolution over the UK. 04 of convective precipitation in the prediction system. As well as the modelling challenges, maintaining and developing further the observational network — especially the radar network — will be necessary to initialise and verify model predictions. In the Tropics, rainfall is dominated by cumulus convection, which itself is organised on a vast range of different space and time scales, from the diurnal cycle of individual clouds to the planetary monsoon systems of Australasia and Africa. The challenge of representing the multi-scale nature of tropical convection in global models is widely recognised. This limits our ability to forecast beyond a few days in the Tropics and potentially compromises our global extended range and longer term predictions. A concerted effort to use cloud system resolving models, combined with new satellite observations of cloud structures, to develop new understanding of organised convection is a central part of our strategy for tackling this key problem. Such studies will also provide information on the multi-scale interactions between physics and dynamics and guide the design of stochastic-based parametrizations. These are likely to gain in importance as the multi-scale nature of ocean and atmospheric flows is increasingly understood. Over the last decade or so, the definition of the global water cycle has evolved from being just a physical system to one that describes the combined effects of physical, biological, biogeochemical and human processes. This system recognises that humans interfere with the global water cycle in many ways through, for example, the increasing extraction of water from rivers and aquifers (more than 50% of easily available freshwater is currently used by humans), irrigation of crops, and changes in land use that affect evapotranspiration and alter the nature and seasonality of run-off. Key issues for climate change that hinge on the global water cycle include: (i) the strength and variability of global and regional hydrological cycles in a warmer world; (ii) freshwater forcing and salinity budget of the global oceans; (iii) terrestrial ecosystems and their dependence on water availability; (iv) fate of polar ice-caps and glaciers with consequent sea-level rise. Water, its availability and its quality, lies at the core of many of the impacts of climate variability and change, and adequate access to water will have major implications, societally, economically and politically, in the coming decades. Our goal must be to develop a more holistic approach to understanding, modelling and predicting the global and regional terrestrial water cycle and its role in the impacts of hazardous weather, climate variability and climate change. This must extend from the prediction of hydrological extremes (floods and droughts), to an integrated assessment of water, food and fibre. Recommendations: • To develop further our capability to produce and interpret probabilistic forecasts of extreme rainfall events over the UK with lead-times of hours to days, especially those of convective origin. • To ensure that the observational network is adequate for initialising and verifying quantitative precipitation forecasts at the local and regional level. • To develop the capability to perform ultra-high resolution process studies of convection, cloud microphysics and precipitation processes to inform improved parametrizations in global and regional models, and to test these against field studies and new Earth observation datasets. • To develop a more holistic approach to the terrestrial water cycle with particular emphasis on hydrology, the hydrological and related impacts of variations and changes in precipitation intensity and frequency. The global hydrological cycle Concept of an Ensemble Prediction System and the various sources of uncertainty that need to be represented. Time Forecast uncertainty Initial condition uncertainty Analysis Model uncertainty Climatology 3.3 Monthly to decadal prediction in a changing climate Model uncertainty arises from stochastic, unresolved processes and parameter uncertainty The societal requirement for climate information is changing. Across the UK government and the business sectors, it is now generally accepted that the global climate is warming and the requirement to adapt to current and unavoidable future climate change is growing. The emphasis is towards more regional and impacts-based predictions, with a focus on monthly to decadal timescales. It is clear that there is an increasing requirement for robust and more detailed science to evaluate adaptation and planning options, and this is one of the key drivers of our strategy to move to much higher resolutions in our climate models. In addition, even without global warming, society is becoming more vulnerable to natural climate variability through increasing exposure of populations and infrastructure, so the need for reliable monthly to inter-annual predictions is growing, especially in the Tropics. We know that the frequency and intensity of drought, flooding and heatwaves appear to be changing, and that these extreme events are most likely to occur when natural climate variability reinforces anthropogenic climate change. This fact alone drives the need for initialised climate predictions. These take into account the current phase of natural climate variability and combine it with expected increases in greenhouse gases to produce improved near-term climate predictions. In the coming decades we are going into uncharted territory as far as the Earth’s climate is concerned; and, an important way of building confidence in our models, and hence our projections, is by continuously testing them in daily to seasonal to decadal predictions. It will be crucially important that we build effective links across the forecasts for these different timescales and how these forecasts are then used by various sectors. These new challenges require a step change in the range of climate predictions we produce and the expert advice we give. Correspondingly, these have implications for the scientific research that needs to be undertaken. Attaining a seamless prediction system, as outlined earlier, which exploits the synergies across weather and climate, will present some new scientific challenges. Initialised climate predictions require a definition of the current state of the climate system, especially the oceans. Whilst we have expertise in independent atmosphere and ocean data assimilations, we do not yet know whether a fully coupled data assimilation system is feasible. It is also increasingly apparent that the upper ocean may play a key 06 Deterministic forecast role on timescales of hours to days, especially in the Tropics. The question of when and how to include an interactive ocean in global weather prediction needs to be addressed, but potentially offers the opportunity for greater synergy between global weather and ocean forecasting, and between global weather and climate prediction. This would also naturally provide a bridge between atmosphere and ocean data assimilation, and ensure a consistent approach to global forecast initialisation across all timescales from days to decades. Ensemble prediction systems (EPS) are now well established in extended range and climate forecasting, but the techniques to represent forecast uncertainty and sample adequately the phase space of the forecasts are quite diverse. These range from initial condition uncertainty (including optimal perturbations and ensemble data assimilation), through stochastic physics to represent the influence of unresolved processes, to the use of perturbed parameters in the parametrizations to represent model uncertainty. These methods essentially address different aspects of forecast and model uncertainty, but there is currently little understanding of the relative importance of each for forecasts on different lead-times. A new research activity is proposed that will bring together the various techniques used in weather forecasting and climate prediction to develop a seamless EPS. Monthly to decadal prediction is still in its infancy and the potential predictability in the climate system for these timescales is largely unknown and probably underestimated because of model shortcomings. A key activity must therefore be the evaluation of model performance with a greater focus on processes and phenomena that are fundamental for delivering improved confidence in the predictions. Recent research has already shown that higher horizontal and vertical resolution has the potential to increase significantly the predictability in parts of the world where it is currently low, such as western Europe. At the same time, more sophisticated measures of defining and verifying forecast skill for the different lead-times need to be developed. These should take account of users’ needs, and therefore stronger links must be established between the science and the service provision. Recommendations: • To bring together global atmosphere and ocean data assimilation and forecasting activities to advance the development of more consistent coupled initialisation and forecasting methodologies. • To develop a seamless Ensemble Prediction System across timescales from days to decades, that considers all sources of uncertainty. Holistic approach to Earth system modelling which includes management options and human responses Physical climate Water demand Clouds Water cycle Permafrost Irrigation Damming Human emissions To focus model evaluation on processes and phenomena in the climate system which have the potential to improve predictability, and to develop measures of forecast skill that reflect more directly users’ needs. 3.4 Sensitivity of the Earth system to human activities How sensitive the Earth system will be to human activities, both greenhouse gas emissions and land-use change, remains hugely uncertain, particularly beyond the next few decades. Reducing that uncertainty has to be one of the major challenges for the Met Office in the coming years. This will require us to accelerate the development of holistic Earth system models so that we can assess with greater confidence the risks of dangerous, abrupt or unexpected climate changes, especially those associated with biogeochemical cycles. An essential component of understanding the sensitivity of the Earth system to human activities is through detailed monitoring and attribution studies. We will seek to maintain our strengths in climate monitoring and climate change detection by engaging strongly with WMO initiatives to produce long-term, robust climate records, and by working actively within the GMES2 framework. Furthermore, we need to understand whether natural weather and climate variability may interact with global warming in a non-linear way to produce unprecedented changes in the Earth system. The attribution of current changes in climate, and increasingly in the Earth system, will require us to draw on the best modelling and statistical methodologies. The attribution of extreme events to global warming will grow in importance for decision-making around mitigation and adaptation and it will be essential that we provide the best possible advice. So, just as increasing model resolution must be a goal for weather forecasting and monthly to decadal climate prediction, it must also be an essential part of our research on Earth system processes and feedbacks. Reducing uncertainties in model climate sensitivity, especially related to clouds, still needs more research. But the prospects for progress are good, with new satellite observations and process-based modelling. On the other hand, potentially unexpected and rapid changes, which could lead to an acceleration of global warming and much more extreme impacts, are major causes for concern. These include the response of the water, carbon and nitrogen cycles, the Greenhouse gases Impacts of climate change Carbon cycle Fires Dust Aerosols • Urbanisation Organic compounds Chemistry Deforestation Ecosystems Agriculture Forestry behaviour of ice in the climate system — collapse of major ice-sheets, loss of Arctic sea-ice and melting permafrost — and the potential for massive releases of methane from ocean hydrates. Much of the science behind these is still very immature and tackling them will require a multi-disciplinary approach that must reach far beyond the Met Office. Our unique role is the capability to bring this multi-disciplinary science together within the holistic Earth system model so that the full range of interactions and feedbacks can be explored. As our knowledge and understanding of the full Earth system develops, we will need to continually reassess what constitutes dangerous climate change, where and for whom, and what new mitigation policies may mean for emissions, atmospheric composition and longer term climate change. Avoiding dangerous climate change will require a much more detailed examination of regional impacts and management options, which must include socio-economic dependencies. We will therefore seek to transform the Earth system model into an Integrated Assessment System by working with key socioeconomic groups in the UK. Furthermore, radical solutions to global warming using geo-engineering must be properly assessed and that can only be done using full Earth system and integrated assessment models. Recommendations: • To pursue an ambitious programme of research and development with our partners to deliver a world-leading, holistic Earth system model. • To engage in international efforts to monitor the Earth system and to detect possible changes. • To understand the influence of natural weather and climate variability on Earth system processes and feedbacks, and to assess the importance of model resolution. • To develop robust methods for attributing changes in climate, especially related to hazardous weather and climate extremes, by combining observations and models of the Earth system. • To extend the Earth system model to include socioeconomics, so that integrated cost/benefit analyses of mitigation policies for avoiding dangerous climate change can be made. • To reduce the uncertainty and to provide more confident assessments of the range of climate sensitivities to human activities. 2 Global Monitoring for Environment and Security (www.gmes.info) is the European Initiative for the establishment of a European capacity for Earth Observation. 07 4. A new structure for delivering Met Office research and development: A key part of this strategy is the restructuring of Met Office Research and Development (R&D) to ensure that the Met Office is best placed to tackle new challenges, and to be fit for purpose to deliver the products and services that customers will require 5–10 years from now, especially as climate change begins to bite. An imperative for any new structure is that it must continue to ensure the world-leading status of the Met Office in Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) and climate change research and prediction. Furthermore, it must recognise that the longterm health and viability of the Met Office as a world-leading service will depend on maintaining a cutting-edge science base in-house across all key areas. It is only by having that core of expertise that we will be able to engage effectively with our partners. The previous sections have developed the arguments around the drivers and imperatives for a more unified approach to delivering our science and predictions. The proposed new structure endeavours to keep the best of the existing R&D structure whilst moving towards this greater unification in the science and modelling where appropriate. It is also aimed at providing greater opportunities for integration and innovation, offering a distinct role for the Met Office Fellows and Expert Scientists. It is anticipated that the proposed structure may be part of the transition to an increasingly unified science programme, as areas of science mature and new priorities for research emerge. For many reasons — scientific, technical and customer-based — maintaining clearly identifiable programmes in weather and climate research is regarded as essential in the short-term. Also, the current division of research across the major strategic areas is still fit for purpose so there are no reasons to make substantial changes. However, there are clear imperatives for improving integration across the existing R&D programmes for the reasons stated above. It is proposed that this is achieved in three ways: 08 (i) Bringing together all R&D under a single Director of Science. The Director of Science will deliver an integrated science programme supported by Deputy Directors in Weather, Climate and Foundation Science and by the Heads of Science Partnerships and Integration and Innovation. The proposed new structure is shown below and the various strategic areas that fall within the three science areas are given in the accompanying table. The Director of Science will also be supported by the Head of Science Programme Administration, who will be responsible for all human resources as well as the project and financial management of the whole programme, working with the Directorate Programme Coordinators. This structure should enable greater flow of resource between the three elements of the programme, as and when required by the science and services. (ii) Forming a new directorate in Foundation Science. This will bring together those elements of R&D which are fundamental to Met Office excellence across weather and climate prediction. This will require some rationalisation and reorganisation within existing groupings. A new group in Global Unified Model (UM) Development and Evaluation is proposed. This will deliver the required integration in UM structure, development and evaluation more efficiently and effectively. The intention is that this new grouping will deliver benefits across the programme, and it is anticipated that other new groupings will enter Foundation Science as the programme develops. (iii) Establishing a programme of integrating and innovating activities. The elements of this programme will evolve with time and will cover initially those areas of research that currently do not function effectively, as well as new and emerging areas of science that are more innovative and strategic. As specific areas mature, they will be taken through into the appropriate Directorate and new topics will be identified and implemented. The Met Office Research Fellows and Expert Scientists are expected to play a major role in the development and delivery of this programme. Staff will be drawn from the three Research Directorates to contribute to the chosen activities as and when required. Initial areas where investment will be made include: coupled data assimilation, land-surface modelling, seamless ensemble prediction systems, atmospheric composition and air quality. Head, Integration and Innovation Chief Scientist Director of Science Head, Science Partnerships Head, Science Programme Administration Deputy Director, Climate Science Head, Met Office Hadley Centre Deputy Director, Weather Science Deputy Director, Foundation Science The Met Office Science Directorate The management group for the Met Office Science Programme will consist of the Director of Science with the three Deputy Directors and two Heads of Programmes. The Met Office Science Advisory Committee (MOSAC) will be expanded to cover all aspects of science and will provide advice to the Director of Science on the strategic development of the Met Office Science Programme. As happens now, the Chair of MOSAC will report to the Met Office Board. Existing Science Review Groups (SRGs) for reviewing specific areas (e.g. Met Office Hadley Centre Science Review Group) will continue for as long as required by the relevant Customer Groups. The Chairs of those groups will also be members of MOSAC to ensure continuity. The strategic science areas covered by each of the Directorates are outlined below. These reflect the core areas of research that the Met Office must continue to invest in, if it is to provide the range of services across weather and climate that society will increasingly need. There are nevertheless synergies between the core areas in all three Directorates (e.g. between Climate Monitoring & Attribution and Satellite Applications, between Ocean Forecasting and Oceans, Cryosphere & Dangerous Climate Change). One of the principal aims of the new structure is to ensure that these are recognised and exploited to their full capacity. The intention is that this structure will also enable us to prioritise areas of research so that we continue to deliver the best possible Science Programme when resources are limited. Strategic science areas within each Directorate Climate Science Foundation Science Weather Science Understanding Climate Change Observational Based Research Operational Weather Forecasting and IT Climate Monitoring and Attribution Atmospheric Processes and Parametizations Satellite Applications Monthly to Decadal Variability and Prediction Global UM Development and Evaluation Data Assimilation and Ensembles Oceans, Cryosphere and Dangerous Climate Change Dynamics Research (and Scalable Codes) Ocean Forecasting Earth System Science and Mitigation studies Customer Applications Climate Impacts and Adaptation Studies 09 5. Collaboration: building stronger partnerships Until recently, the science of weather and climate has largely been the domain of physicists and mathematicians, but increasingly we need to engage with many other disciplines, from chemistry and biology to geography, engineering and social science. The evolution to a truly interdisciplinary science will pose new challenges but also new opportunities. At the same time, the modelling, prediction and computing challenges have grown, especially as we look towards higher resolution models and seamless prediction systems. Collaboration will be essential for delivering the capability that we will require in the coming decade if we are to deliver a world-class weather and climate service. There is also no doubt that engaging with the users of our predictions raises many new and exciting science questions, so the right structures will need to be put in place to facilitate that knowledge exchange. It is with this backdrop that the Met Office has embraced its role as an integrator and facilitator of weather and climate modelling, research and prediction, and now places building stronger partnerships at the core of its science strategy. We have already actively pursued the provision of the UM system to national and international organisations, and we are beginning to reap the benefits of those partnerships. We have worked with the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) to establish the Joint Weather and Climate Research Programme, a development of real strategic importance. We increasingly see ourselves playing a key role in the crossGovernment, cross-Research Council programme on Living with Environmental Change (LWEC), both in research and in delivery. These activities need to be strengthened and extended as the demands of the science grow, and the challenge of acquiring and maintaining the right level of research infrastructure, especially supercomputing, is to be answered. 10 We propose therefore to establish a new group under a Head of Science Partnerships that will coordinate and develop the expanding range of collaborative activities. These activities will include: (i) Bringing a more structured approach to our partnerships with international UM users by: (i) agreeing joint research plans and sharing research and development activities; (ii) developing more effective mechanisms for exchanging code and results; (iii) considering how the computing demands of seamless ensemble prediction can be shared. (ii)Strengthening and extending the Joint Weather and Climate Research Programme with NERC to: (i) encompass the major elements of joint ownership of national capability which are critical for the UK science base (specifically, model codes, research supercomputing and major observational platforms); and (ii) facilitate greater alignment of directed research and major research initiatives to ensure maximum benefits and efficiency. (iii)Developing a more effective relationship with the Research Councils and the LWEC programme to ensure that our national capability in the science, modelling and prediction of the weather, oceans and climate is used to maximum effect, and that opportunities exist for the Met Office to lead or participate in LWEC and related programmes where appropriate. (iv)Establishing the Met Office Academic Partnership Scheme as an effective interface between academic research, training and career development, and the delivery of user-driven products and services. This major initiative will set in place formal arrangements with leading universities for collaboration on key areas of science of common interest to both organisations. It will facilitate exchange fellowships and sabbaticals, sponsor undergraduate and PhD prizes, internships and studentships, for example by focusing the existing CASE award scheme on areas of strategic importance, and contributing to the education, training and career development of young researchers in both institutions. The intention is for staff to move more freely between the Met Office and academia to deliver improved levels of knowledge exchange. (v)Establishing the Met Office Industrial Fellowship Scheme with key customers, sectors and companies, to create opportunities for staff from customer organisations (including Government departments) to spend time in the Met Office and vice versa. This will instil a greater level of understanding of customers’ needs and of the Met Office’s capabilities to deliver those needs. The potential for the Technology Strategy Board to facilitate this scheme will be explored in collaboration with the Research Councils. 6. Recruitment and staff 7. Research development infrastructure The success of the Met Office as a world-leading scientific institution relies on the quality and commitment of its staff, and therefore on recruiting and retaining the best scientists. This is already challenging with the rapid growth in job opportunities in environmental science in both the academic and private sectors. Presenting the Met Office as an exciting and vibrant research environment with opportunities to participate in a wide range of cutting-edge science must be part of our strategy for attracting and retaining the best. Better communication of our research through the web and other media will be essential. We will need to be even more targeted in our recruitment of the best science graduates. Alongside the Academic Partnership Scheme outlined above, other mechanisms for linking with leading universities will be considered. This could include structured vacation training and work experience programmes, undergraduate ‘industrial’ scholarships and prizes. Our use of CASE awards to PhD students should be targeted at the best candidates. In order to retain and develop our scientists, we must offer more opportunities for advancement, for self-development, creativity and innovation. We should seek to give our best scientists in the order of 20% of their time to pursue their personal research ideas and for this to be recognised within the staff review process. Sabbaticals and exchange visits with our academic and industrial partners should be encouraged as part of this scheme. We should also ensure that our mentoring of young scientists is of the highest quality and that they are more fully engaged in programme planning and the wider research of the Met Office. The proposed restructuring of Met Office R&D should enable more opportunities for advancement and leadership, especially through the new programme on Integration and Innovation. It is anticipated that the Expert Scientist and Research Fellow roles will provide greater opportunities for research leadership internally and externally, and will increasingly be focused on delivering the Science Strategy. Recommendations: • Seek ways to present the Met Office as a vibrant and exciting science organisation with wide-ranging opportunities for research. • Extend the targeting of our recruitment at the best graduates through a range of mechanisms, including formal partnerships with leading universities. • Provide more opportunities for Continuing Professional Development and for career progression within the organisation. Addressing the four major science challenges that underpin the delivery of the best possible weather and climate services, will need sustained access to a world-class research infrastructure, especially modelling and software engineering, supercomputing hardware and observational platforms. Some of these can be delivered in partnership, especially with NERC, but it has to be recognised that these are the bedrock of our science programme and that without them the Met Office will not be in a position, 5–10 years from now, to deliver the products, services and advice that society will need. 7.1 Modelling Modelling underpins everything we do — from research to operations and services. Our weather and climate model codes are increasingly complex and computationally demanding as well as being technically challenging to maintain. So, alongside the ongoing investment in computing hardware, there is an urgent need to develop a much stronger capability in computational science and software development. In the coming years we must tackle the technological challenges of exploiting petascale computing. Next generation machines will be based on multi-core, massively parallel architectures and all model codes, not just those of the Met Office, will need to be rewritten to scale across many thousands of processors. This is an urgent problem which will need dedicated resources to tackle it and will affect all areas of our research and delivery. At the same time, we will need to develop innovative ways to analyse and visualise the massive datasets that we produce. Both issues will require us to nurture and grow a new generation of weather and climate scientists who are expert in both the science and computational methods. Currently, computational science and software engineering are under-resourced in the Met Office, with the effect that scientists spend a disproportionate amount of time on technical problems. Mechanisms to bring together the computational science and Information Technology (IT) support within the Science Programme must be pursued. At the same time, we will need to find other avenues to acquire the expertise and support that we need, particularly through our partner organisations such as NERC, and through leading IT companies. Forming new strategic alliances with centres of excellence in computational science should be part of our strategy. 11 Joint Met Office and NERC Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements. 7.2 Supercomputing It has been recognised for some time that the science of weather and climate is ahead of the availability of computing power, and that more skilful and confident predictions on all timescales could be delivered if more computing power was available. A key element of this strategy must therefore be to make the case, scientifically and operationally, for substantially increased resources. The difference between operational and research computing requirements needs to be recognised. Operational delivery requires the appropriate capacity to deliver a suite of weather forecasts on a 24-hour, 7-day a week basis, without interruption. Increasingly it will also need to accommodate an operational suite of climate predictions. Consequently, operational supercomputing needs to be robust and under our control, and it needs a substantial partition for preoperational development and testing. We will increasingly need to develop strong economic arguments for the continuing investment by Government in operational supercomputing. Research, on the other hand, requires access to advanced computing capability in order to make further progress in model resolution and complexity, data assimilation and process-based research. The delivery of this capability can be different from the operational system and could involve national (such as extending the current joint partition of the Met Office machine with NERC) or international partnering arrangements. Our strategy should be to play a leading role in the development of national, European and/or international initiatives for research supercomputing, and being prepared to consider a range of funding models, including business investment. 12 7.3 Observational platforms and instrumentation Advancing our models and predictive capabilities relies heavily on better understanding of atmospheric processes and interactions. Retaining a strong capability in observationally based research will be crucial from now onwards, to provide the underpinning science for the four major challenges outlined earlier. The UK Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements (FAAM) provides us with access to a highly instrumented research aircraft which allows us to play a worldleading role in atmospheric science and to engage in major international field experiments. Without those opportunities the future development of our models, particular at the local and regional level, would be weakened substantially. This facility is operated jointly with NERC and this partnership provides many benefits scientifically which we should seek to maintain and grow. It also provides an important platform for customer-driven applications and can be deployed rapidly in environmental emergencies. Retaining this national capability must continue to be a high priority for the Met Office. We should seek to do this in collaboration with NERC through the Joint Weather and Climate Research Programme. In addition to the research aircraft, ground-based observational sites will continue to be important for atmospheric research and we should seek a stronger collaboration with NERC in developing and maintaining at least one highly instrumented site in the UK. The development of new instrumentation for observing the atmosphere should also be part of the Met Office Science Strategy from now onwards. As our modelling and predictive capabilities at regional and local levels grow, it will be essential that the observational base keeps pace with those developments, in terms of both research and operations. Collaboration with the academic community and the instrument providers on metrology and the development of prototype instruments needs to be developed further as a core part of our strategy. EUMETSAT Third Generation Weather Satellite (left) and ESA’s EarthCare mission (right). 7.4 Space-borne Earth Observation Earth observation from space will play an increasingly important role in all areas of the Science Programme. It underpins our weather forecasting and will more and more define our climate monitoring, attribution and prediction activities. It will be essential, therefore, that ongoing commitments to invest in weather and climate observing systems are secured internationally. We will continue to use our expertise in the science applications of Earth observation to help steer the future priorities of the EUMETSAT and ESA The focus of our Earth observation activities has traditionally been on the physical variables of the atmosphere, such as temperature, humidity and winds. These data are crucial to our weather forecasting capabilities and currently give us an additional 12 hours of skill in the northern hemisphere and as much as 48 hours in the southern hemisphere. As the information content of satellite observations increases, with the development of high resolution, multi-spectral measurements, there must be a sustained effort in developing more sophisticated retrieval algorithms and data assimilation techniques, so that these observations can be exploited fully. Recommendations: • To develop a stronger base in computational science to tackle the challenges of next generation, scalable models, and of analysing and visualising weather and climate data. • To make a strong case for enhanced investment in supercomputing at the national level to support operational delivery across weather and climate prediction. • To engage proactively in European and international initiatives for access to petascale/exascale supercomputing capability to enable cutting-edge research. • To develop a joint strategy with NERC to sustain our world-class capabilities in observational platforms. • To facilitate the development of new instrumentation to enhance our operational observational capabilities in the UK. • To continue to invest in the exploitation of Earth observation data and to engage actively in setting priorities for future investment in space-borne measurements. Moreover, the Met Office will increasingly need to consider satellite measurements of other components of the Earth system such as cloud vertical structure, atmospheric composition (including dust, aerosols and greenhouse gas concentrations), oceanography, hydrology and ecosystems. These data are essential for model development and evaluation as well as for providing the range of products and services that society will require. This is challenging research. Collaboration with leading groups in the UK and Europe — especially through the GMES programme and ESA’s International Space Innovation Centre at Harwell — will be essential. 13 8. International leadership A key element of this strategy is to maintain the Met Office amongst the leading weather and climate science institutes in the world, and to position it as the world-leader in the delivery of a seamless prediction service from weather forecasting for a few hours ahead to climate prediction out to decades. As weather and climate prediction becomes increasingly complex, the number of viable systems around the world is likely to decline. Our strategy of working with national met. services and offering the Unified Model system should be strengthened. We should take an increasingly strong role internationally in capacity building, especially in those countries that cannot sustain their own research and predictive capabilities. This is a key part of our strategy in developing the UK Climate Service so that it has global reach. International collaboration and engagement in major international initiatives is an essential part of maintaining a vibrant research programme and securing our worldclass status. We will continue in our proactive engagement with WMO research activities, especially through the World Weather Research Programme (WWRP) and the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP), by ensuring that the Met Office is represented on the relevant committees and by offering leadership in areas where we have specific expertise. Over the years, the Met Office has made major contribution to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), providing many Lead and Contributing Authors to the Assessment Reports. We will continue to do so, as well as contributing to the shaping of the future structure of the Reports as the demands on climate change prediction grow. Within Europe, the rapidly emerging interests in climate services are likely to have a major impact on the structure of European climate science, modelling and prediction. Our strategy is to engage fully with the opportunities that will arise within the future EU Framework Programmes and seek to provide leadership, as we did through the FP6 ENSEMBLES Programme, whilst preserving our national capability. Recommendations: • To grow the international use of the UM system as the ‘model of choice’ in a structured way that benefits the Met Office. • To engage proactively in international research organisations especially the WWRP and WCRP. • To seek a greater leadership role in European weather and climate science and prediction activities. 14 9. Communicating our science and positioning the Met Office within the UK science base An overarching imperative of the new Science Strategy is to promote the Met Office as a major scientific organisation at the forefront of weather and climate research, and as an international leader in weather and climate prediction and services. Whilst our science credentials are known by our peers, there are clear requirements for communicating our science capabilities more widely, in part as our response for the call for more openness and transparency in research, methods and data. The new research pages of the website will be developed further to provide increasing visibility of our science, not only to fellow researchers but to our stakeholders, customers and the general public. Other methods for communicating our science will be developed using a range of media and drawing on external consultants. As part of the professional development of the science staff, training in science communication will be strengthened. There will be a major effort to improve our visualisation tools as an aid to better communication. As part of our wider strategy to secure the future of the Met Office, the key role that the Met Office plays in the UK science base will be established more firmly. Securing and promoting the position of the Met Office as a world-leading science organisation pervades every aspect of this Science Strategy. We will continue to engage proactively with the Chief Scientific Advisors across Government departments, and to seek better and more constructive opportunities to work with the Research Councils in ways that reflect our scientific capabilities. 10. Conclusions This new Science Strategy reflects the changing priorities for weather and climate research, modelling and prediction, and seeks to set in place new structures that will enable the Met Office Science Programme to be more flexible in the future in response to the challenges of sustainable funding and the internationalisation of weather and climate prediction and services. Through the proposed restructuring, through the focusing of the programme around four major science challenges, and with an increasing emphasis on research partnerships, this Strategy seeks to secure the position of the Met Office as a world-leading scientific organisation. By so doing, this will ensure that we continue to provide an increasingly accurate and reliable service across all sectors that are vulnerable to the effects of adverse weather, ocean and climatic conditions, whether now or in the future. 15 Met Office FitzRoy Road, Exeter Devon, EX1 3PB United Kingdom Tel: 0870 900 0100 Fax: 0870 900 5050 [email protected] www.metoffice.gov.uk Produced by the Met Office © Crown copyright 2010 10/0206 Met Office and the Met Office logo are registered trademarks