Past Event RIMES Convenes Regional Workshop on Strengthening Last-Mile Communication and Flood Forecasting
Date: June 8 – 11, 2026

RIMES Convenes Regional Workshop on Strengthening Last-Mile Communication and Flood Forecasting

The Regional Integrated Multi-Hazard Early Warning System (RIMES), in collaboration with the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR), successfully conducted the SLMC Regional Review and Planning Workshop and the Flood Forecasting on a Shoestring Budget (FFSB) Technical Workshop from 8–11 June 2026 in Pathum Thani, Thailand.

The four-day regional event brought together representatives from national meteorological and hydrological services, disaster management authorities, local government institutions technical institutions, and development partners from across South and Southeast Asia. The workshop provided a platform to review implementation progress, exchange country experiences, strengthen technical capacities, and identify practical ways to sustain people-centered early warning services.

The SLMC Regional Review and Planning Workshop focused on progress across Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. The country teams shared achievements, lessons learned, operational challenges, and priorities for future investments aimed at improving impact-based forecasting, decision support systems, anticipatory action, and community preparedness. The discussions supported forward planning for the next phase of SLMC and encouraged stronger alignment between country needs, operational tools, and institutional sustainability.

The FFSB Technical Workshop, led by UCAR and FFSB experts, introduced practical and cost-effective flood forecasting approaches using open-source tools, freely available datasets, and operational forecasting workflows. Technical discussions covered precipitation estimation and forecasting, forecast uncertainty, ensemble hydrologic forecasting, hydrologic model parameter estimation, reservoir inflow forecasting, and applications of forecasting tools such as RDHM, HEC-RAS, and TRITON. Participants also explored how low-cost forecasting methods can be adapted to resource-constrained operational settings.

The workshop also provided a platform for participants to identify common regional challenges, exchange good practices, and explore opportunities for future collaboration in strengthening early warning systems and disaster risk reduction initiatives.

By linking SLMC’s last-mile communication work with FFSB’s practical flood forecasting approach, the workshop highlighted the importance of connecting forecasting science with actionable early warnings.

RIMES extends its sincere appreciation to UCAR and FFSB experts, participating country agencies, technical experts, development partners, and all workshop participants for their valuable contributions to the success of the event. The workshop reaffirmed the importance of regional cooperation and knowledge sharing in strengthening resilience and ensuring that early warning information effectively reaches vulnerable communities.

June 19, 2026