Abstract

Hybrid hydroclimatic forecasting systems employ data-driven (statistical or machine learning) methods to harness and integrate a broad variety of predictions from dynamical, physics-based models – such as numerical weather prediction, climate, land, hydrology and Earth system models – into a final prediction product. They are recognised as a promising way of enhancing prediction skill of meteorological and hydroclimatic variables and events, including rainfall, temperature, streamflow, floods, droughts, tropical cyclones, or atmospheric rivers. Hybrid forecasting methods are now receiving growing attention due to advances in weather and climate prediction systems at sub-seasonal to decadal scales, a better appreciation of the strengths of machine learning, plus expanding access to computational resources and methods. Such systems are attractive because they may avoid the need to run a computationally-expensive offline land model, can minimize the effect of biases that exist within dynamical outputs without explicit bias correction and downscaling, benefit from the strengths of machine learning models, and can learn from large datasets, while combining different sources of predictability with varying time-horizons. Here we review recent developments in hybrid hydroclimatic forecasting and outline key challenges and opportunities. These include obtaining physically-explainable results, assimilating human influences from novel data sources, integrating new ensemble techniques to improve predictive skill, creating seamless prediction schemes that merge short to long lead times, incorporating modelled initial land surface and ocean/ice conditions, acknowledging spatial variability in landscape and atmospheric forcing, and increasing the operational uptake of hybrid prediction schemes.

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