Just Accepted
This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.
The Australian wave forecast system with statistical wind correction
Abstract
The Bureau of Meteorology has an important role in providing marine services around Australia and its oceans. These services strongly depend on guidance from numerical wave models, which depend on numerical weather and ocean prediction systems. The Bureau has upgraded its collective suite of all numerical models to the Australian Parallel Suite (APS) 4. The APS systems have vastly improved their skill because of increased resolution, enhanced data assimilation (including increasing numbers and types of observations) and improvements in physical parameterisations. In this paper, we verify the skill of the numerical weather prediction model and the underlying wave model using observations from satellite systems and wave buoys. The characteristics of the surface winds led to the development of a statistical wind correction (i.e., bias correction) that superseded the flux-scaling applied in the APS3 version. Comparisons to the legacy wave model and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecast reanalysis ERA5 indicate that the Bureau's global wave forecast system outperforms the legacy model and reanalysis across a few metrics. Satellite altimetry verification shows an improvement in root-mean-square error, variability, probability of exceedance, and probability density function. Wave buoy verification around Australia agrees with the skill assessment from satellite altimeters. Looking at the root-mean-square error of significant wave height, we estimated a mean error of 0.29 m for altimeter observations and across 84 wave buoy locations.
ES25010 Accepted 17 May 2025
© CSIRO 2025