I already discussed my earlier
sea ice estimates and how they came out, but a few things have happened since then to occasion a two part look at forecast verification. As usual, it's prompted by seeing someone do it wrong.
One of the errors, which I have to remedy on my own part, is that you should verify (compare to reality)
all your forecasts. I think that the end of May ice estimates are the most interesting and important, rather than later in the year. Partly this is because of how I think the sea ice pack behaves. Partly it is because the practical uses of sea ice information I know of require that kind of lead time. It takes a long time to get a tanker up to Barrow from Seattle, for instance.
Xingren and I did submit a later estimate, for the August Sea ice outlook. That estimated 4.60 million km^2 for the September average sea ice cover. An excellent approximation to the NSIDC's reported minimum (4.60) but not as good compared to the observed average extent of 4.90. Actually a touch worse than our May (30th, even though not reported by SEARCH until June) estimate of 5.13 from the model. Both estimates were well within 1 standard deviation of the natural variability (errors of +0.23 and -0.30 for May and August's predictions, respectively, versus about 0.5 for the natural variability). So, on the whole, pretty reasonable. Just that we'd have expected better from the later estimate. But ... there's more to that story ...