BAMOS Vol 31 No.3 September 2018 | Page 5

BAMOS Sep 2018 Workshop summary High Impact Weather Workshop Kimberley Reid University of Melbourne In 2016, around 8000 people died from weather-related disasters globally. Beth Ebert, from the Bureau of Meteorology, announced this statistic when she introduced the first AMOS workshop on High Impact Weather, or HIWeather, at the University of Melbourne on the 10th of July. The project aims to use an interdisciplinary approach to understand high impact weather; increase society’s resilience; enhance forecasting capacity from time-scales of minutes to weeks; and produce social, economic and environmental applications from the research. The project will focus on five key weather events: flash flooding, wildfires, winter weather hazards, extreme winds, and urban heatwaves and air pollution. The talks for the first workshop discussed the processes and predictability of these events. Rob Warren (Monash University) revisited his Ph.D. to share a recipe for Heavy Precipitation Events (HPEs). Flash flooding from HPEs can develop on time-scales from minutes to hours, so adequate warnings are a serious challenge. Rob led the audience on a tour of HPEs from the USA to Cornwall and to Reunion Island where a Tropical Cyclone interacting with orography dumped six metres of rain over ten days. Sarah Harris (Monash University) brought the audience back to south-east Australia, which is one of the worst regions in the world for socially disruptive fires. Sarah shared the challenges of using the MacArthur Forest Fire Danger Index (FFDI) to classify fire events across different locations. For example, low relative humidity has a substantial effect on fire danger in central Victoria, while drought factor is critical in the north. A new fire danger index is in development and should address these challenges. Following a brief afternoon tea break, and the eviction of the pub-next-door’s cat who had visited the lecture theatre for head scratches from doting scientists, Hamish Ramsay (CSIRO) kicked off the second half of the workshop with his talk on extreme winds. A significant source of extreme winds are Tropical Cyclones (TC); however TC intensity and wind speeds are hard to predict and hard to measure. But solutions are being developed. Quadruply nested grids can be used to model how complex terrain exacerbates TC intensity, and ‘Doppler on Wheels’ are being sent into eyewall mesovortices to measure extreme local winds. Acacia Pepler (Bureau) discussed winter weather hazards. In the Northern Hemisphere, winter hazards include freezing rain and blizzards, but here in Australia, East Coast Lows (ECLs) bring destruction in the colder months. Defining and identifying ECLs is still unsettled science. Annual frequencies can range from two to twenty ECLs depending on who is defining them - and why. New work in this area is looking at the 3D structure of ECLs to understand their dynamics further. Michael Reeder (Monash University) presented the final talk of the day on Australian heatwaves. Michael’s speech was met with a furore from the audience as he challenged the existing paradigm by showing that 80% of the heating during the heatwave that preceded Black Saturday was due to subsidence from above and only 20% was due to surface processes or horizontal advection. There will be four more HIWeather workshops over the next four years. Anyone interested in being involved with HIWeather should contact Beth Ebert ([email protected]). Visit the WMO website for more information about the project. Workshop presenters. Left to Right: Rob Warren, Sarah Harris, Hamish Ramsay, Beth Ebert, Acacia Pepler & Michael Reeder. Image: Kimberley Reid 5