About the UK Hydrological Outlooks Portal

The UKCEH Hydrological Outlooks Portal provides interactive, dynamic access to many of the outputs of the UK Hydrological Outlook.

The Portal allows users to visualise the model outputs from the Outlook, both spatially and in the form of a number of time series. This allows users to explore the hydrological forecasts for the next one to three months, and sometimes beyond.

These outputs provide information on the likely trajectories of river flows a season or more ahead, and their production is intended to help support water resources managers in their decision-making. Importantly, however, as with all forecasts, these outputs are based on model projections with many uncertainties, so should be used with caution. Users should be aware of the methodologies used to make the forecasts, and their attendant uncertainties, as described on these pages and in further references.

There are several different forecasting approaches used for river flow forecasting in the Hydrological Outlook:

  • Historic based flow forecasts:
    • Persistence and hydrological analogues
    • Ensemble Streamflow Prediction (ESP) — GR6J model
  • Meteorological based flow forecasts, using Met Office historic weather analogues:
    • GR6J model
    • Water Balance Model (G2G-WBM)

In addition, this portal includes some regional information on current conditions from a 1km gridded Grid-to-Grid (G2G) hydrological model run. The 1km maps will be accessible in a future version of this portal.

Current conditions

The current conditions are not forecasts but indicate the hydrological status at the end of the preceding month. They are based on using weather observations up to the forecast start date as inputs to the high-resolution Grid-to-Grid hydrological model (G2G).

There are several products presented as part of these current conditions.

This model is not currently used in Northern Ireland.

Bell, V A, Davies, H N, Kay, A L, Marsh, T J, Brookshaw, A, Jenkins, A. 2013. Developing a large-scale water-balance approach to seasonal forecasting: application to the 2012 drought in Britain. Hydrological Processes, 27(20), 3003–3012. doi:10.1002/hyp.9863

Historic Based Forecast Methods

Persistence and Hydrological Analogues method

This approach is not based on hydrological models; it is a statistical approach based on past river flow data.

The results presented here are based on two main types of methods; Persistence and Hydrological Analogues. As the name suggests, persistence forecasts are based on the assumption that the observed river flow will carry on into the next month. Because flows tend to be higher and more variable in winter than in summer, the flow is compared with the average flow for that particular month, and it is the anomaly compared with this average (and variability) that is used as the Persistence forecast for the coming months. Persistence forecasts are particularly useful for catchments on aquifer outcrops, where the river flow varies slowly from one month to the next due to the high groundwater contribution. The hydrological analogues forecasts are based on selecting previously observed sequences of flows that are the most similar to the recently observed past, and using these to project forwards. The outlook derived by averaging the flows in the following months (the forecast duration) in these analogue years, giving a higher weight to years with more similar analogues. This is the Weighted Mean forecast. A variant of the Analogues method called the Shifted Weighted Mean forecast involves shifting the Outlook up or down so that the flow in the most recently observed month matches the weighted mean from the analogues in the corresponding month. The historical analogues are six months long for the one-month forecast, and nine months long for the three-month forecast.

This approach is applied to approximately 90 locations in the UK, the forecast from the method with the higher confidence (best performance in the past) is presented. The confidence of the forecast is represented by the size of the dot. To be included, a forecast must have a hindcast correlation (correlation between past forecasts and observed data) of at least 0.23 and be significant at the 95% level for a one-sided t-test. The outline of the dot indicates which method has been used at each location: a solid line for Persistence and a dashed line for one of the Analogue methods.

Read more detail about this method in: Brief description of seasonal river flow forecasts using persistence and historical analogy.

Further information is provided in the scientific paper:
Svensson, C. 2016. Seasonal river flow forecasts for the United Kingdom using persistence and historical analogues. Hydrological Sciences Journal, 61(1), 19–35 doi:10.1080/02626667.2014.992788.

Ensemble Streamflow Prediction (ESP) method

The Ensemble Streamflow Prediction (ESP) outlook, or Outlook by historical climate, is based on monthly ensembles of historical sequences of observed climate (rainfall and potential evapotranspiration) that form input to a hydrological model. The outputs are probabilistic simulations of the average river flow over the forecast period (one to twelve months ahead), at each location. The simulations are generated by the GR6J conceptual rainfall-runoff model, calibrated on observed flows.

These forecasts are available for a set of 316 catchments around the UK. On this portal, catchment-scale forecasts are available over the next one to twelve months at each site.

This outlook is based entirely on historical sequences and therefore does not contain any knowledge of the state of the atmosphere and ocean. It is hence possible that some of the historical sequences used might be inconsistent with current large-scale atmospheric conditions and would therefore be unlikely to occur in the next few months.

Detail of the modelling set up, and the skill of this method have been published in:
Harrigan, S, Prudhomme, C, Parry, S, Smith, K, and Tanguy, M. 2018. Benchmarking ensemble streamflow prediction skill in the UK. Hydrology and Earth Systems Sciences.

Note that the hydrological model used to generate the Outlook by historical climate was GR4J up to September 2023. From October 2023 onwards, GR6J has been used instead. For more details, please see the section on River flow from historical climate.

The model generally performs well across the UK, but there are important variations in skill. In addition, there are some biases in modelled river flows relative to observations, which should be taken into account when exploring raw streamflow forecast values (given in cumecs or mL/d).

Meteorological Based Forecast Methods

Two hydrology models (GR6J and G2G-WBM) are run with the Met Office historical weather analogues data. The historical weather analogues method uses Met Office predictions of average weather 1 and 3 months ahead as input to an ensemble of hydrological forecasts. High resolution weather observations from HadUKGrid are used to provide finer spatial detail than directly produced by the Met Office forecast model. This is achieved by seeking 'analogues' — periods in UK weather records with similar weather patterns to those predicted. The forecast period is split into thirds and observed data for each third is taken from different past years, having accounted for non-weather-related trends. The pool of all possible combinations creates the set of weather scenarios available for use as analogues to the forecast weather. The benefit of this 'shuffling' approach is that it gives a much larger selection for matching the forecast, meaning the method is not constrained by the limited number of observed years. For each member of the Met Office forecast ensemble, the 10 analogues that best match the predicted average weather pattern (surface pressure map) over the whole forecast period are selected. Precipitation sequences constructed from the selected analogue scenarios are then used as inputs to hydrological models, creating the ensemble of hydrological forecasts.

GR6J

In this method the GR6J model uses the same modelling set up as used for the Ensemble Streamflow Prediction Method, as described in Harrigan et al (2018). The model is run using observed precipitation, and temperature-based Potential Evapotranspiration to achieve initial conditions. It is then run forward using historic climate data, extracted for non-sequential dates according to the ensemble of historical weather analogues provided by the Met Office. This provides ensemble river flow forecasts that are conditioned on the Met Office seasonal weather predictions.

Harrigan, S, Prudhomme, C, Parry, S, Smith, K, and Tanguy, M. 2018. Benchmarking ensemble streamflow prediction skill in the UK. Hydrology and Earth Systems Sciences.

Research and testing for this forecasting method was funded under the HydroJULES programme.

Water Balance Model (G2G-WBM)

The Water Balance model (WBM) combines an estimate of the total subsurface water storage at the start of the month, estimated by the G2G, with an ensemble of rainfall forecasts to provide 1km gridded estimates of river flows up to a few months ahead for Great Britain (GB).

First, subsurface water storage at the start of the month is estimated using the Grid-to-Grid (G2G) hydrological model, driven by observed rainfall and evaporation over the preceding month. This GB-wide estimate is shown relative to historical extremes on the Current Conditions – Relative subsurface wetness and Current Conditions – Relative soil wetness pages.

The WBM is then run at monthly resolution for the next one- and three-months across GB using historical weather forecasts provided by the Met Office.

The WBM runs at a 1km spatial resolution across Great Britain and forecasts are presented on this Portal at both this 1km resolution and aggregated to regional scales. The WBM cannot currently be used in Northern Ireland.

For further technical details and an assessment of the performance of this method, please see:

Bell, V A, Kay, A L, Jones, R G et al. 2009. Use of soil data in a grid-based hydrological model to estimate spatial variation in changing flood risk across the UK. Journal of Hydrology. doi:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2009.08.031.

Bell, V A, Davies, H N, Kay, A L et al. 2017. A national-scale seasonal hydrological forecast system: development and evaluation over Britain. HESS. doi:10.5194/hess-21-4681-2017