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Water flow probabilistic predictions based on a rainfall–runoff simulator: a two-regime model with variable selection

Marie Courbariaux, Pierre Barbillon () and Éric Parent
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Marie Courbariaux: Université Paris-Saclay
Pierre Barbillon: Université Paris-Saclay
Éric Parent: Université Paris-Saclay

Journal of Agricultural, Biological and Environmental Statistics, 2017, vol. 22, issue 2, No 5, 194-219

Abstract: Abstract Probabilistic forecasting aims at producing a predictive distribution of the quantity of interest instead of a single best guess point-wise estimate. With regard to water flow forecasts, the two main sources of uncertainty stem from unknown future rainfall and temperature (input error, i.e., meteorological uncertainty) and from the inadequacy of the deterministic simulator mimicking the rainfall–runoff (RR) transformation (hydrological uncertainty or RR error). These two sources of uncertainty can be dealt with separately and only the latter will be considered here. Only hydrological uncertainty is at stake when recorded meteorological data (instead of meteorological forecasts) are used as inputs to feed the RR simulator (RRS) for probabilistic predictions. The predictive performance of the RRS may strongly depend on the hydrological regimes: rapid flood variations induce large errors of anticipation but a series of dry events will translate into a much more smoother sequence of river levels due to the easily predictable behavior of the soil reservoir emptying. Consequently, a model with several regimes adapted to different error structures appears as a solution to cope with the issue of unstationary predictive variance. The river regime is modeled as a latent variable, the distribution of which is based on additional outputs of the RRS to be selected. Inference is performed by the EM algorithm with both steps leading to explicit analytic expressions. Asymptotic confidence regions for the estimates are provided within the same EM framework. Model selection is also performed, including the length of the model memory as well as the choice of explanatory variables for the latent regimes. The model is applied to a series of water flow forecasts routinely issued by two hydroelectricity producers in France and in Québec and compared with their present operational forecasting methods.

Keywords: EM algorithm; Probit model; Model uncertainty; Probabilistic forecasts; Hydrology; Rainfall–runoff model (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)

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DOI: 10.1007/s13253-017-0278-5

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