PUB using new system to monitor rainfall and potential flood locations
A new rainfall monitoring and prediction system has been developed to provide earlier rainfall warnings and pinpoint locations of potential flash floods so that response operations can be better deployed.
National water agency PUB said yesterday that since its implementation at the end of 2018, the new system has produced forecasts 30 minutes ahead of a rainfall event with 65 per cent accuracy.
It said it incorporated the system fully into its flood management operations towards the end of last year, in anticipation of the year-end north-east monsoon.
Responding to queries from The Straits Times, it said its Joint Operations Centre can use the system's Web interface to deploy quick response team vehicles early to locations at risk of flooding.
Once on site, its officers can assess the situation and direct traffic or deploy flood barriers to divert flood waters, if necessary.
PUB director of catchment and waterways Yeo Keng Soon said: "In anticipation of more frequent extreme weather events due to climate change, we are tapping technology to make sure that our officers can be deployed as quickly as possible in the event of heavy rainfall.
"We hope this will help reduce inconvenience to the public and keep them out of harm's way."
The system uses the rainfall monitoring capabilities of X-band radars, typically used for localised weather monitoring as well as air traffic control and maritime vessel navigation.
An X-band radar can monitor rainfall within a radius of 50km. The radars are combined with an algorithm that provides forecasts for short periods by observing the current movement, growth and decay of rain clouds.
The PUB first started developing the system in June 2016, working with the Hydroinformatics Institute and industrial electronics firm Furuno Singapore.
It was completed in December 2018 and three X-band radars were placed at CleanTech One building in Jurong, Woodlands NEWater Service Reservoir and Changi Water Reclamation Plant.
The PUB said it is still working to refine the system; it will add three more radars in the next two years - in Seletar, Tuas, and central Singapore - and a machine learning algorithm, which will further boost its accuracy in forecasting rainfall.
The agency previously relied largely on Meteorological Service Singapore for its forecasts.
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