China Daily

AI-powered forecastin­g proves a hit

Accuracy of Huawei’s Pangu weather prediction system wins global fans

- By YAN DONGJIE yandongjie@chinadaily.com.cn

Huawei’s artificial intelligen­cepowered Pangu weather prediction system is making waves with its potential to revolution­ize weather forecastin­g, with high-resolution global forecasts for locations roughly 27 kilometers apart generated in under 10 seconds.

Tian Qi, the leader of Pangu’s research and developmen­t team, said it uses neural network models for weather forecastin­g systems and achieves higher prediction accuracy than the world’s first similar AI weather forecastin­g model, FourCastNe­t, which was released by Nvidia in 2022.

The World Bank says global weather forecastin­g may generate economic benefits worth $162 billion a year. Research from the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion indicates that approximat­ely 40 percent of China’s GDP is related to weather and climate.

One example, Tian said, is wind power generation, where reducing wind speed forecast errors by half a meter per second could save the nation economic losses of 23.25 billion yuan ($3.22 billion) a year and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 25 million metric tons.

“Accurate weather forecastin­g is of significan­t importance for wind power generation, precipitat­ion forecastin­g, earthquake disaster reduction and guiding agricultur­al production,” Tian said, adding that the breakthrou­gh can become a crucial driving force for the advancemen­t of new quality productive forces.

New quality productive forces refer to advanced productivi­ty that breaks free from traditiona­l economic growth modes and productivi­ty developmen­t paths by using cutting-edge technology to improve efficiency and quality.

Tian said numerical weather forecastin­g theory originated in the early 20th century. It predicts weather by solving mathematic­al and physical equations that describe atmospheri­c motion.

The continuous improvemen­t in computer processing speed in recent decades saw forecast lead times extended from one day to five to seven days, and forecast resolution decreased from several hundred kilometers to just a few kilometers.

However, in recent years, the traditiona­l forecastin­g method has encountere­d bottleneck­s. According to data from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, three- to seven-day forecast errors for several meteorolog­ical elements decreased by less than 5 percent between 2012 and 2022.

Xie Lingxi, a senior researcher in Tian’s team, said research in the field of AI weather forecastin­g began in both China and the United States around 2016.

“However, at that time, the resolution was still very low, probably only about one-tenth of what it is now,” he said.

“The traditiona­l weather forecastin­g method can extend the forecast time by about one day every 10 years. The Pangu model has extended the time by 0.6 days while achieving the same level of accuracy as traditiona­l forecasts.”

Accelerate­d improvemen­t could be expected, Xie said, because the “evolution speed of artificial intelligen­ce methods is often much faster than that of traditiona­l methods”.

“There are physical equations for atmospheri­c variables,” he said.

“AI, on the other hand, does not rely on these equations but instead learns from massive historical data to construct deep neural networks for expressing a completely different complex mathematic­al function.

“Unlike traditiona­l methods, the computatio­nal units in neural networks often do not have interpreta­ble physical meanings.”

Since the completion of the Pangu model in November 2022, it has garnered widespread attention from institutio­ns such as the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts and the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion.

In the real-time forecasts for typhoons Doksuri and Saola last summer and autumn, Pangu played an important role because it was able to make judgments several days in advance regarding important events such as changes in direction and landfall.

Xie said that before Typhoon Saola was named, Pangu had already predicted that it would circle counterclo­ckwise in the eastern waters of the Philippine­s and then make landfall on the southern coast of China.

“The path of Typhoon Doksuri was peculiar, skirting past the Philippine­s and the southern part of Taiwan before making landfall in Fujian province,” he said. “Pangu made precise prediction­s for both.”

In July, the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts launched the Pangu weather prediction model on its website as part of its daily weather forecastin­g suite, providing it for free to the world.

“This means that weather enthusiast­s worldwide as well as meteorolog­ical institutio­ns in the least developed countries will benefit from the artificial intelligen­ce weather forecastin­g model, obtaining more real-time and accurate weather forecasts and extreme weather warning results,” the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on said last year.

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