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N.H. Schade et al.: Regional Evaluation of ERA-40 Reanalysis Data
Meteorol. Z, 22, 2013
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ocean-atmosphere climatology in the North Sea and adja
cent parts of the North Atlantic and the Baltic Sea has
become an important task. The North Sea is of particular
interest and importance for marine carrier operations and
off-shore activities. Especially in this context, subsequent
projects within the KLIWAS model chain investigate
amongst others appropriate strategies for adaption to
changed environmental conditions to safeguard the effi
ciency of transport ways and to preserve the water quality
and the habitats in coastal waters. Thus, the quality of
reanalyses and operational analyses should be precisely
checked and possible biases compared to in-situ observa
tions should be addressed.
For the validation of the RCM output over the North
Sea area, high quality controlled surface marine in-situ
observations and/or reanalyses data are needed as refer
ence of the actual climate state. In-situ observations are
the sole ground based measurements of atmospheric
parameters over the open sea. They provide information
that cannot be reliably measured from satellites (Kent
and BERRY, 2005), e.g. surface air temperature and sea
level pressure, although the data quality varies within
the course of time. Several publications dealing with
the popular International Comprehensive Ocean-Atmo
sphere Data Set ICOADS (WORLEY et al., 2005; WOOD
RUFF et al., 2011) are focusing on the ocean on a global
scale. Some authors have specifically investigated the
importance of ship log data in scientific research, also
on a regional scale, e.g. KUETTEL et al. (2009) for the
reconstruction of past sea level pressure fields derived
from ship logbook wind data over the North Atlantic/
European area. Nevertheless, gridded data sets are mostly
of an insufficient resolution for regional climate analyses
and based on terrestrial observations, containing only a
small number of island stations, if any (ALEXANDER
et al, 2009; Jones et al., 1999).
Here, we introduce the database of the Centre for Glo
bal Marine Meteorological Observations, further referred
to as GZS. This database is hosted by the German Mete
orological Service DWD and aims to ensure the produc
tion and supply of marine climatological data.
For the evaluation of the ERA-40 data, areas were
identified with a sufficient number and quality of obser
vations in GZS. The investigated data in this study, cov
ering a time period of 40 years beginning in 1961, are
described in the following section 2. DWD’s high quality
control procedures for the marine atmospheric observa
tions are described briefly in section 2.1 and the data pre
processing in section 2.2. Results of our investigations
are presented in section 3, followed by a summary and
conclusion in section 4.
2 Data
GZS is regularly updated with meteorological observa
tions over the world’s oceans, reaching back to 1850. It
contains the available data from all sorts of measurement
platforms: Data from Voluntary Observing merchant
Ships (VOS), research, naval and light vessels, buoys,
and digitized data from historical weather journals
(DWD project HISTOR, GLOEDEN, 2011) and registra
tions. Altogether, GZS consists of more than 188 million
real-time, distributed via the international Global Tele
communication System (GTS), and non real-time weather
reports. These data from national sources and bilateral or
international exchange are complemented by data from
ICOADS. ICOADS has an overall proportion of
20,21% in GZS for the investigated period from 1961—
2000, decreasing towards the end of the period
(11.91% in the last decade). Since the proportion of
GTS reports, inherent in both GZS and ICOADS, further
increases, additional reports from ICOADS in GZS are
now of about 3.5%.
The ERA-40 Reanalyses (UPPALA et al., 2005) covers
the time period from 1957 to 2002 and contains world
wide meteorological parameters in 60 height levels on
a 6 hourly basis. It is provided by the European Centre
for Medium-Range Weather Forecast (ECMWF) in col
laboration with other institutions, e.g. the MetOffice,
Exeter, UK, or the Max-Planck-Institut fiir Meteorologie,
Hamburg, Gemiany. Several data types are assimilated,
i.e. operational real-time data distributed via GTS
(1979-2002), observations from aircrafts, buoys, offshore
platforms, radiosondes and ship data, taken from ICO
ADS (1950-1999). Since 1973 satellite data are included
also. The assimilation system uses an updated form of the
older 3D variational analyses of the ECMWF with a
spectral T159 resolution, corresponding to a
1.125 x 1.125 degree geographical grid. The model has
a reduced Gaussian grid of about 1.125 degree in latitude
and a reduced number of longitudinal grid points from
the Equator to the Poles.
Each data set has its own particular problem: While
GZS marine in-situ observations are unevenly distributed
in space and time and are derived from several different
observation types from different countries and with dif
ferent methods for the measured parameters, the spatial
resolution of the existing reanalyses data is coarse and
the models suffer from biases in numerics and parameter-
izations, inhomogeneities of data assimilation input, etc.
In this context ERA-40 is used as an example for reanal
yses data, since the KLIWAS model chain is based on the
ENSEMBLES Hindcast runs which are forced by ERA-
40. Further investigations with ERA-Interim and other
reanalyses products are planned in the future.
In the following, we describe the procedures to obtain
GZS air temperatures and sea level pressures in the North
Sea area of best possible quality to conduct reliable com
parisons with ERA-40 reanalysis data.
2.1 High Quality Control
The high quality control (HQC) procedures used for
GZS data are more or less the same as published in the