THORPEX was started in 2003 with the intention of being a ten-year programme, but it continues to be active as of 2014. The 12th annual session was held at the WMO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland in March 2014.
Creation and International Science Plan (2003-04)
THORPEX was created in 2003 at the Fourteenth World Meteorological Congress under the auspices of the WMO Commission for Atmospheric Sciences as a ten-year international research and development programme to accelerate improvements in the accuracy and the social, economic, and environmental benefits of 1-day to 2-week high-impact weather forecasts. At the time of creation, the following sub-programmes were listed in the THORPEX International Science Plan:
Global-to-regional influences on the evolution and predictability of weather systems.
Global observing-system design and demonstration.
Targeting and assimilation of observations.
Societal, economic, and environmental benefits of improved forecasts.
International Research Implementation Plan (TIP) and the creation of TIGGE
TIGGE was developed and made operational over the coming years, and data from TIGGE was used in many meteorology papers. A 2010 review by Bougeault et al. surveyed the past work and future plans of TIGGE, and concluded: "We are convinced that the TIGGE databases will constitute a key resource for reaching the objective of THORPEX: the acceleration of the progress of the forecast skill for severe weather events from 1 day to 2 weeks ahead. This will be reached by a robust combination of research on the scientific basis of ensemble prediction, experimentation with new products, and development of new protocols and policies for data exchange across WMO Member States and across the science and application communities." Another 2010 paper provided a timeline with 2008-2012 as the development phase for the Global Interactive Forecasting System and 2012 onward as the implementation period. In March 2014, the TIGGE-LAM was launched to improve on regional ensemble forecasts.
Components
TIGGE
The THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble, also known as TIGGE, was envisaged in the February 2005 THORPEX International Research Implementation Plan and the groundwork for it was laid in a 2005 workshop. Its goal is to improve ensemble forecasting for the weather worldwide. Currently, the TIGGE data is available from these sources:
A review of TIGGE was published in 2010. In March 2014, the TIGGE-LAM was launched to improve on regional ensemble forecasts.
GIFS
The Global Interactive Forecasting System was first described in the THORPEX International Research Implementation Plan published in February 2005 and has since been mentioned in discussions of TIGGE as part of the next step in the evolution of ensemble forecasting after TIGGE. However, GIFS does not have a public-facing implementation as of April 2014.