Publication | Closed Access
Ten Years of Science Based on the Canadian Precipitation Analysis: A CaPA System Overview and Literature Review
90
Citations
72
References
2018
Year
EngineeringWeather ForecastingEarth System ScienceEarth SciencePrecipitationRegional Climate ResponseNumerical Weather PredictionClimate ProjectionDrought ForecastingClimate Change CanadaClimate ForecastingCanadian Precipitation AnalysisClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGeographyNear Real-time AnalysesCapa System OverviewHydrologyClimatologyWater ResourcesDroughtLiterature Review
Near real-time quantitative precipitation estimates are required for many applications including weather forecasting, flood forecasting, crop management, forest fire prevention, hydropower production, and dam safety. Since April 2011, such a product has been available from Environment and Climate Change Canada for a domain covering all North America. This product, known as the Regional Deterministic Precipitation Analysis, is generated using the Canadian Precipitation Analysis (CaPA) system. Although it was designed for near real-time use, an archive of pre-operational and operational products going back to 2002 is now available and has been used in numerous studies. This paper presents a review of the various scientific publications that have reported either using or evaluating CaPA products. We find that the product is used with success both for scientific studies and operational applications and compares well with other precipitation datasets. We summarize the strengths and weaknesses of the system as reported in the literature. We also provide users with information on how the system works, how it has changed over time, and how the archived and near real-time analyses can be accessed and used. We finally briefly report on recent and upcoming improvements to the product based, in part, on the results of this literature review.
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