231-3 Seasonal Forecasts and the Trade-Off Between Payoff and Risk in the Australian Grains Industry.
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Climatology & ModelingSee more from this Session: Symposium--Capturing the Benefits of Seasonal Climate Forecasts in Agricultural Management
A case study is presented for a typical wheat farm in Western Australia. In this medium-low rainfall region, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology’s seasonal forecast system, based on a global ocean/atmosphere dynamical model, has moderate skill at forecasting the growing season rainfall total. A realistic conservative management strategy in this region is to apply fertilizer only when the expected net return is double the initial cost. The forecast can be used to decide different application rates in years of above and below median rainfall based on long-term returns. If a farmer wants to be 80% sure that the forecast is more valuable that simply using climatology to determine a single application rate, then this will occur after just three years of using a forecast. More generally, there is evidence that seasonal forecasts are of considerable benefit to farmers over just a few years when assessed against a realistic conservative management strategy.
See more from this Session: Symposium--Capturing the Benefits of Seasonal Climate Forecasts in Agricultural Management