Towards an End-to-End Analysis and Prediction System for Weather, Climate, and Marine Applications in the Red Sea
January 1, 2021·,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,·
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Ibrahim Hoteit
Yasser Abualnaja
Shehzad Afzal
Boujemaa Ait-El-Fquih
Triantaphyllos Akylas
Charls Antony
Clint Dawson
Khaled Asfahani
Robert J. Brewin
Luigi Cavaleri
Ivana Cerovecki
Bruce Cornuelle
Srinivas Desamsetti
Raju Attada
Hari Dasari
Jose Sanchez-Garrido
Lily Genevier
Mohamad El Gharamti
John A. Gittings
Elamurugu Gokul
Ganesh Gopalakrishnan
Daquan Guo
Bilel Hadri
Markus Hadwiger
Mohammed Abed Hammoud
Myrl Hendershott
Mohamad Hittawe
Ashok Karumuri
Omar Knio
Armin Koehl
Samuel Kortas
George Krokos
Ravi Kunchala
Leila Issa
Issam Lakkis
Sabique Langodan
Pierre Lermusiaux
Thang Luong
Jingyi Ma
Olivier Le Maitre
Matthew Mazloff
Samah El Mohtar
Vassilis P. Papadopoulos
Trevor Platt
Larry Pratt
Naila Raboudi
Marie-Fanny Racault
Dionysios E. Raitsos
Shanas Razak
Sivareddy Sanikommu
Shubha Sathyendranath
Sarantis Sofianos
Aneesh Subramanian
Rui Sun
Edriss Titi
Habib Toye
George Triantafyllou
Kostas Tsiaras
Panagiotis Vasou
Yesubabu Viswanadhapalli
Yixin Wang
Fengchao Yao
Peng Zhan
George Zodiatis
Abstract
The Red Sea, home to the second-longest coral reef system in the world, is a vital resource for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The Red Sea provides 90% of the Kingdom’s potable water by desalinization, supporting tourism, shipping, aquaculture, and fishing industries, which together contribute about 10 %-20 % of the country’s GDP. All these activities, and those elsewhere in the Red Sea region, critically depend on oceanic and atmospheric conditions. At a time of mega-development projects along the Red Sea coast, and global warming, authorities are working on optimizing the harnessing of environmental resources, including renewable energy and rainwater harvesting. All these require high-resolution weather and climate information. Toward this end, we have undertaken a multipronged research and development activity in which we are developing an integrated data-driven regional coupled modeling system. The telescopically nested components include 5-km- to 600-m-resolution atmospheric models to address weather and climate challenges, 4-km- to 50-m-resolution ocean models with regional and coastal configurations to simulate and predict the general and mesoscale circulation, 4-km- to 100-m-resolution ecosystem models to simulate the biogeochemistry, and 1-km- to 50-m-resolution wave models. In addition, a complementary probabilistic transport modeling system predicts dispersion of contaminant plumes, oil spill, and marine ecosystem connectivity. Advanced ensemble data assimilation capabilities have also been implemented for accurate forecasting. Resulting achievements include significant advancement in our understanding of the regional circulation and its connection to the global climate, development, and validation of long-term Red Sea regional atmospheric-oceanic-wave reanalyses and forecasting capacities. These products are being extensively used by academia, government, and industry in various weather and marine studies and operations, environmental policies, renewable energy applications, impact assessment, flood forecasting, and more.
Type
Publication
BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
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