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Developing and Communicating Warnings

Developing and Communicating Warnings. Sarah Davies UK Met Office Wednesday 17 th April 2013. In this session. Using the UK Met Office National Severe Weather Warning Service (NSWWS) as an example Understand what makes a weather warning effective Essential elements of an effective warning

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Developing and Communicating Warnings

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  1. Developing and Communicating Warnings Sarah Davies UK Met Office Wednesday 17th April 2013

  2. In this session • Using the UK Met Office National Severe Weather Warning Service (NSWWS) as an example • Understand what makes a weather warning effective • Essential elements of an effective warning • Communicating warnings • Communicating uncertainty • Verifying warnings

  3. Effective What makes a weather warning effective

  4. Criteria for issuing a warning • Need to find out • what types of weather affect the general public and emergency/disaster responders • If it doesn't affect them, do you need a warning? • Establish and research • which types of weather need a warning and why • how much rain has to fall or how strong does the wind need to be to warrant a warning? • if thresholds or potential impacts are the best measure for issuing a warning

  5. Thresholds 20mm/hr 30mm/hr 40mm/hr 10mm/24hr 50mm/24hr 50mph gusts 60 mph gusts 2m tidal surge Impacts Saturated ground/Large puddles Flooding of agricultural land from rainfall/ from river bursting banks/coastal Flooding of road networks from rainfall/ river bursting banks/coastal Flooding of towns/cities from rainfall/ river bursting banks/coastal Trees blown down/boats overturned/ power cables brought down Criteria for issuing a warning Which is more important?

  6. History of NSWWS Great Storm 1987

  7. UK Severe weather • Severe Gales • Heavy Snow • Heavy Rain • Dense Fog • Freezing rain/widespread icy roads • Heat wave Exceptionally severe when: • Severe gales/storms • Very heavy snowfall, blizzards, drifting snow All based on meteorological thresholds

  8. National Severe Weather Warning Service • Warns community of severe or hazardous weather • Widespread disruption of communications • Transport difficulties • Threat to lives, welfare, property

  9. National Severe Weather Warning Service THREE TIERS • ADVISORY • Issued daily at around11am • EARLY WARNING • Issued several days in advance of the severe weather (typically 3-5 days) • FLASH • Issued when the severe weather is imminent (up to 6 hours in advance)

  10. Severe/Extreme • Severe weather – these events are not unusual and are experienced on a number of occasions throughout the year, but more commonly winter months. They will impact on individual areas, but often not significantly. • Extreme weather – these events are unusual and only happen around 3 or 4 times per year. They have a significant impact on infrastructure and may lead to casualties.

  11. Early Warnings • Issued in advance of the expected severe weather (typically 3-5 days) • Assessment of the risk of disruption when it is above 60% • Each region is assigned percentage risk of disruption (impact based) • Disruption map published on website • Allows time for preparations to be made • Once issued, updated daily until the event

  12. Early Warning on the web 1/2/09

  13. Flash Warnings • Issued when the severe weather is imminent (target of 2 hours, up to 6 hours in advance) • Issued if certain critical meteorological thresholds are likely to be met with an 80% probability • Issued on county/local authority basis • React to rather than prepare for

  14. An evolving process In 2009, we asked our stakeholders about: • Usefulness of warnings • Timeliness • Clarity

  15. We worked with partner agencies to develop a risk matrix The alert/warning will provide a combination of The potential impact the weather will have The likelihood of the weather happening NSWWS since 2011

  16. Likelihood • Allows us to communicate uncertainty • In general uncertainty is greater at longer lead times • Most alerts at 3 to 4 day lead time will be assigned a low/very low likelihood

  17. Generic Impacts

  18. Impactshttp://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/advice/ Other impacts specific to rain, wind, ice and fog also listed.

  19. Colour of warnings (Impact Matrix) • Colour determined by combination of likelihood and impact • Matrix below shows a high likelihood of a medium impact event produces an AMBER warning

  20. Severe Weather WarningsColour Codes

  21. Interpreting the colours • ‘Be Aware’ means • Remain alert and keep up to date with latest forecast • ‘Be prepared’ means • Remain vigilant, keep up to date with latest forecast and take precautions where possible • ‘Take action’ means • Remain extra vigilant, keep up to date with latest forecast. Follow orders and any advice given by authorities and be prepared for extraordinary measures

  22. Impacts • Important to ascertain which impact column is being used • Do not get into habit of dismissing yellow warnings/alerts • “it’s only a yellow” • Yellow could be a very low likelihood of high impacts

  23. Access to warnings • All warnings/alerts appear on the Met Office website and Hazard Manager • http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/warnings/ • Amber and Red Warnings are sent to Category 1 and 2 responders via a self registration scheme • Email- pdf • Email- plain text • SMS • Can select up to 3 emails, 1 sms, and 1 fax

  24. Snow • Ice • Strong Winds • Fog • Heavy Rain

  25. National Severe Weather Warning Service • Sent to ~850 organisations • Over 2,500 delivery points, including… • Blue Lights (Police, Fire and Ambulance) • Central, regional and local government • NHS • Utilities • Media Cascaded through individual organisations

  26. Warnings on the webHomepage ticker banner

  27. UK Warnings

  28. Chief Forecasters Assessment

  29. Communicating our forecasts and warnings - UK • Met Office website • Text and email alerts • Public Weather Service • TV and radio • You Tube • Twitter • Facebook • Flickr • Blog • Mobile Phone / Apps

  30. Public Appreciation 90% of the public think Met Office weather warnings are useful

  31. Communicating our forecasts and warnings • Met Office forecasts are broadcast on: • BBC TV • BBC National Radio • BBC Local Radio • BBC websites • ITV and other commercial TV networks • Commercial Radio • Newspapers

  32. BBC Weather Centre

  33. We have two BBC TV studios

  34. Verifying warnings • Why do we need to? • What do we need to know? • How can we develop a severe weather database • Example from Met Office/UK • How could you do it in your country?

  35. Why? • What happened? • Did we forecast it? • At the right time • In the right place • What were the impacts? • Was the warning communicated effectively • Improve understanding, better warning next time

  36. What do we do? • Verification • Objective verification • Did we issue a warning when a threshold was exceeded? • Subjective verification • Did the warning give good advice • What happened? What were the impacts….

  37. Subjective verification • Verifying the impacts • Media reports • Twitter feeds • Impacts reported by responders • Verifying the usefulness • Right place? • Right time? • Enough lead time? • Good advice?

  38. On Call Log

  39. How do we do it ? • On call log • Verification folder

  40. How do we do it ? • On call log • Verification folder • Meetings each month • All data kept

  41. How could you do it? Things to think about • How could you develop a severe weather database? • What are your issues? • How could you collect severe weather information from remote corners of the country?

  42. Recap • The National Severe Weather Warning Service uses a combination of LIKELIHOOD and IMPACT to give a single colour • Easy to understand • Aims to change peoples behaviour • Use a variety of methods of communication • Verification is important to continually improve • Work with stakeholders….

  43. Questions?

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