Status of cataloguing high impact events in Europe

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Status of cataloguing high impact events in Europe Stefan Rösner supported by Buhalqem Mamtimin, Maya Körber Division Regional Climate Monitoring, Deutscher Wetterdienst 1

WMO Regional Association VI Test Phase Kickoff Meeting RA-VI held a kickoff meeting for the Regional pilot test of the UUID from 2-3 July 2018 in Offenbach (Germany) in which 18 countries participated to develop implementation guidance to test the proposal. Participants agreed that the test phase for cataloguing of high impact events should be based on the following general principles, Including: 2

RA-VI Test Phase Principles a. Keep it simple and feasible consider the costs, resource and time to implement b. Preserve the right of each country to state how they choose to record high impact events c. Do not categorize hazards or events into groups (e.g., meteorological, hydrological, climate) d. Initially restrict to hydro-meteorological hazards e. Do NOT quantify and qualify hazard definition or express its severity (e.g. extreme, heavy, high) f. Align to Common Alert Protocol (CAP) for warnings to avoid duplication, confusion and misinterpretation 3

Steps of cataloguing hydro-meteorological events within the test phase 18 participating countries High impact hydro-meteorological events are recorded by countries, Data is collected in a standard template provided by RCC Network Europe Node on Climate Monitoring led by DWD (RCC Node-CM), Participating countries send event data to RCC Node-CM once a week/ month, 4

Steps of cataloguing hydro-meteorological events within the test phase RCC Node-CM facilitates over-all technical coordination of the test phase including integration of information collected from countries; RCC Node-CM provides KML, GML files for the countries to get an overview of the reported events during the UUID test phase; RCC Node-CM will provide a report of the test phase, to enable a decision at the 2019 WMO Congress. 5

Assignment of Universal Unique Identifier (UUID) Countries assign individual UUIDs to events they report; UUID as a means of tracking events and enabling them to be systematically linked to associated data on loss and damage routinely collected by relevant national authorities; UUID should be identified with a standard typology of high impact events; A single System UUID for hydro-meteorological events is assigned by RCC Node-CM to all events in order to link them with the originating source (e.g. tropical cyclone); 6

WMO recommendation for collecting information 7

WMO recommendation for collecting information Minimum elements to be recorded during the recording process shown in red. 8

WMO recommendation for collecting primary hazards (Event Type) and weather systems Primary Rain Snow Temperature Hail Fog Wind Frost Ice Haze Dust Sand Lighting Tornado Drought Floods Marine Waves Avalanche Thunderstorms* 1 System Cyclonic (e.g. Tropical, Extra-tropical cyclone, mid-latitude cyclone) Anti-cyclonic Convective (thunderstorms) 9

WMO headline of event type list Headline Hoar frost Gale Heavy rain Extreme precipitation Hurricane Typhoon Heavy rain Ice Storm Snowstorm Squall Tropical storm Strong gale Subtropical Storm Hydrological drought Meteorological drought Coastal flood Estuarine flood Flash flood Fluvial (riverine) flood Ice and debris-jam flood Multiple event flood Seasonal flood Single event flood Snowmelt flood Sand haze Sand storm Dust storm Black carbon Brown clouds Pollen pollution episode Polluted air Blizzard Dry Spell Wet Spell Cold wave Heatwave Landslide/Mudslide Mud flow Acid rain Storm surges Tsunami Avalanche Downburst 10

The approach of the evaluation To describe a standard typology of high impact events; We need a way to think spatially GIS is a support system for spatial thinking; To visualized the information collected/ reported, a layer-based model within GIS environment has been developed. 11

Event categories as data layers in ArcGIS framework 12

The approach of the evaluation Linkage by system UUID 20-25 th : Storm Knud/Bronagh/Ali crossed Norway, Denmark, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Germany, UK and Ukraine. Since events reported stem from same weather systems, all related events get the same system ID for linkages. 13

Sharing of preliminary results To get an overview of the extreme events during the UUID test-phase, map and layers in KML and GML formats are provided for participating countries via RCC Node-CM website. 14

The way of sharing of preliminary results KML Map in Google Earth 15

The way of sharing of preliminary results GML Layer for GIS user in free and open source Geographic Information System (QGIS) 16

Summary UUID: the countries assign a UUID number to each high impact event they wish to report, Integration: If two or more high impact events have the same source, they will be linked by a single System UUID. System UUID: identifies the weather system from which the different events originate; Allows connecting hydro-meteorological information with impact information (e.g. in context of Loss and Damage) GIS used to visualize spatial information reported on impact events KML and GML files provide access to information collected 17

Thank you for your attention! Dipl.-Met. Stefan Rösner Head, Division Regional Climate Monitoring, Coordinator WMO RA VI RCC Network, Deputy GCOS German Coordinator Frankfurter Str. 135 63067 Offenbach Germany T: +49 (0)69 8062 4306 F: +49 (0)69 8062 3759 E: stefan.roesner@dwd.de or: rcc.cm@dwd.de or: gcos@dwd.de or: gs.dkd@dwd.de I: www.dwd.de/rcc-cm www.rccra6.org www.gcos.de 18