UPDATE: A good photo of one of the Russian stations has been found, see below after the “read more” link.
As most readers know by now, the problematic GISTEMP global temperature anomaly plot for October is heavily weighted by temperatures from weather stations in Russia.
GISTEMP 11-12-08 – Click for larger image
Like in the USA, weather stations tend to be distributed according to population density, with the more populated western portion of Russia having more weather stations than the less populated eastern areas such as Siberia. To illustrate this, here is a plot of Russian Weather Station locations from the University of Melbourne:
Click picture for larger image, source image is here
Interestingly, the greatest magnitude of the GISTEMP anomaly plot for October is in these mostly unpopulated areas where the weather station density is the lowest. While I was pondering this curiosity, one of the WUWT readers, Corky Boyd, did a little research and passed this along in email:
…Posters at Watts Up have commented on the ongoing consistently high anomalous temperatures from Russia. I have noticed this too. In light of the erroneously posted data for October, I took a look at the monthly NCDC climate reports back to January 2007. By my eyeball estimate the results from Russia are almost all on the high side. . Some I classified as very highs are massively high. Of the 21 months reported, only 2 appeared to be below average.
Category 2007 2008 (9 months)
Very high 6 4
High 3 1
Average 2 3
Low 0 1
Very Low 1 0
Is there a way to validate or invalidate GISS data by comparing it to RISS? Does it strike you as odd that the verifiably erroneous data has shown up in the same area that was suspect in the first place? Could there be a pattern?
Corky also sent along a series of images depicting global near surface and ocean temperature anomalies from NOAA. Here is the most recent one from September 2008:
I was curious if indeed there was any pattern to the Russian anomaly, so I decided to animate the last year and a half worth of images. You can see this animation below. It is about 1 megabyte in size, so please be patient while it downloads.
Click for full sized animation
What I found interesting was that the January 2007 anomaly (the last time we had a “global heat wave”) was primarily in the northern Russian and Asian. According to January 2007 UAH satellite anomaly data, the Northern Hemisphere had a whopping anomaly of +1.08°C and the “northern extent” was even greater at +1.27°C, the largest anomaly ever in the Northern Extent dataset
Curiously though, the very next month, the Russian anomaly virtually disappears and is replacing with cooling, though a sharp boundary to warming now exists in Asia. It was as if somebody threw a switch in Russia.
Click for larger images
In March 2008, a very large positive anomaly returned in Russia, and again in April evaporated with the same abruptness as the Jan-Feb 2007 transition. Again almost as if a switch was thrown.
Click for larger images
Such abrupt repeated changes don’t seem fully natural to me, particularly when they occur over the same geographic location twice. I realize that two events don’t make a trend, but it is curious, given that we now have had a problem with Russian weather data again that caused GISS to announce the “hottest October on record”.
I also noticed that in the animation from the anomaly maps, there does not seem to be much of an anomaly in the summer months.
This made me wonder what some of those weather stations in Russia might be like. So I went to the Russian Meteorological Institute website at http://www.meteo.ru/english/
I know from John Goetz work as well as this artcle in Nature that Russian weather stations had been closing with regularity due to the trickle down effects of collapse in the former Soviet Union. Though some new ones are being built by outside agencies, such as this one sponsored by NOAA in Tiksi, Russia.
Click for a larger image
What I found interesting in the NOAA press release on Tiksi, was this image, showing weather stations clustered around the Arctic:
Click for a larger image
The interesting thing is that all these stations are manned and heated. The instruments appear to be “on” the buildings themselves, though it is hard to tell. One wonders how much of the building heat in this tiny island of humanity makes it to the sensors. The need for a manned weather station in the Arctic always comes with a need for heat.
I was hoping my visit to the Russian Meteorological institute website might have some particulars on the remaining weather stations that have not been closed. I didn’t find that, but what I did find was a study they posted that seems to point to a significant warm temperature anomaly in Russia during winters between 1961 to 1998:
Fig. 1. Linear trend coefficient (days/10 years) in the series of days with abnormally high air temperatures in winter (December-February), 1961-1998.
From the Russian study they write:
For the winter period 1961-1998, most of the stations under considerations exhibit a tendency for fewer minimum temperature extremes. Maximum (in absolute value) coefficients of the linear trend were obtained in the south of the country and in eastern Yakutia.
Whenever I read about elevated minimum temperatures, I tend to suspect some sort of human influences such as UHI, station siting, or irrigation (humidity) which tend to affect Tmin more than Tmax.
In Northern Russia Siberia, I wouldn’t expect much in the way of irrigation. So that leaves station siting and UHI as possible biases. UHI seemed doubtful, given that many of these Russian Stations in Siberia are in remote areas and small towns.
So I decided to put Google Earth to work to see what I could see. One of the stations mentioned in a recent post at Climate Audit cited the station of Verhojansk, Russia, which has temperatures conveniently online here at Weather Underground.
From the Navy Meteorological exercise I found that Verhojansk has a wide variance in temperature:
Verkhojansk is located in a treeless shallow valley. There is snow on the ground during winter months; it melts in the spring. Verhojansk experiences the coldest winter temperatures of any official weather station outside of Antarctica. Verhojansk has Earth’s most extreme temperature contrast (65oC) between summer and winter. Which of the following indirect factors contribute to this extreme seasonal variation?
From the GHCN station inventory file at NCDC I found that Verhojansk, Russia had a lat/lon of 67.55 133.38 which when I put it in Google Earth, ended up in a mud flat. The Google Maps link from Weather Underground was no better, also off in a field.
Looking in NCDC’s MMS station database yeilded better luck, and I found a more precise lat/lon of 67.55,133.38333 There was very little other helpful information there on the station.
The station appeared to be located in town, though I have no way of verifying the exact location. The lat/lon may be imprecise. But something curious popped out at me as I was scanning the Google Earth image of Verhojansk looking for what might be a weather station – it looks like pipes running across the surface:
Click for larger image
These “pipes” appear to go all over town. Here is a closer view, note the arrow to what I think might be the weather station location based on the fencing, objects on the ground that could be rain gauges or shelters, and what looks like an instrument tower:
Click for larger image
I was curious about what these pipes could be, it certainly didn’t look like oil pipelines, and why where they so close to houses and building and seem to network all over town. Doing a little research on Russian history, I found my answer in the pervasive “central planning” thinking that characterized Russian government and infrastructure. It’s called “District Heating“
From Wikipedia:
District heating (less commonly called teleheating) is a system for distributing heat generated in a centralized location for residential and commercial heating requirements such as space heating and water heating.
But for Russia there was this caveat:
Russia
In most Russian cities, district-level combined heat and power plants (Russian: ТЭЦ, Тепло-электро централь) produce more than 50 % of the nation’s electricity and simultaneously provide hot water for neighbouring city blocks. They mostly use coal and oil-powered steam turbines for cogeneration of heat. Now, gas turbines and combined cycle designs are beginning to be widely used as well. A Soviet-era approach of using very large central stations to heat large districts of a big city or entire small cities is fading away as due to inefficiency, much heat is lost in the piping network because of leakages and lack of proper thermal insulation [10].
I should also point out that district heating is not limited to Russia, but is in many northern European countries. It seems quite prevalent in cold Euro-climates, and even extends into Great Britain.
So I searched a bit more, and found some pictures of what Russian district heating looks like from the ground. Here is one from Picasaweb from somebody’s trip to Russia:

Click for source image.
Note the pipes in the photo above are not insulated.
I also found a very interesting picture of steam pipes, also uninsulated, from a trip report to the “hot zone” of Chernobyl:

And finally a picture of Krasnoyarsk thermal power station Number 1 that has recently been in the news, according to Reuters due to a burst steam pipe:

Click for larger image – Note the pipes coming out to the left of the power station. You can see steam pipes around the city in this Google Maps view here.
So all this begs the question:
If Russian weather stations are located in cities that have this district heating plan, and a good percentage of the pipes are uninsulated, how much of the waste heat from the pipes ends up creating a local micro-climate of warmth?
Remember when I said that the NOAA map anomalies centered over Russia seemed to be prevalent in winter but not summer? It stands to reason that as winter temperature gets colder, more waste heat is dumped out of these inefficient systems to meet the demand. Basically, we have an active UHI situation in the city that increases in output as temperatures drop.
In the areal photos above of Verhojansk, it appears that some pipes are insulated (white, what appears to be main lines) while others are rust brown, and appear near buildings and dwellings.
I got to thinking about why these pipes might be uninsulated. First there is the classic inefficiency and carelessness of Soviet workmanship, but another thought occurred to me: Russian people might like it that way. Why? Well imagine a place where you walk to the market every day, even in subzero temperatures. Since many of these pipes seem to follow streets and sidewalks, wouldn’t it be a more pleasant walk in winter next to a nice toasty steam pipe?
Steve Mcintyre wrote about this station at Climate Audit, citing a puzzle in the data, here is an excerpt of his post:
Verhojansk
Now there are many puzzles in GHCN adjustments, to say the least, and these adjustments are inhaled into GISS. Verhojansk is in the heart of the Siberian “hot spot”, presently a balmy minus 22 deg C. The graphics below compare GISS dset0 in the most recent scribal version to GISS dset 2 (showing identity other than small discrepancies at the start of the segment); the right compares GISS dset0 to the GHCN-Daily Average.
Over the past 20 years, the GISS version (presumably obtained from GHCN monthly) has risen 1.7 deg C (!) relative to the average taken from GHCN Daily results.
Left- GISS dset 2 minus Giss dset0 [[7]]; fight – Giss minus GHCN Daily
What causes this? I have no idea.
Maybe it’s the steam pipes. We need to send somebody to Russia to find out. Of the many station lat/lons I looked at, Verhojansk was the only one I found with enough Google Earth resolution to see the steam pipes. Maybe the heart of our Russian temperature anomaly lies in central heating.
George Costanza could be right.
UPDATE: The photo below shows the Verhojansk Meteorological station and it’s instruments. Hat tip to Jeff C. for the photo below:

Direct URL to the photo above here
Note the cable going to the Stevenson Screen suggesting automated readings. Also note the vertical plume at left.
The station can be seen from Google Earth here
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Telegraph.co.uk : The world has never seen such freezing heat.
More background information on Steam heating in Russia from “Randy Black’s Favorite Tales from Siberia”:
http://books.google.com/books?id=OMFqrBHezD8C&pg=PA144&lpg=PA144&dq=siberia+steam+heating&source=bl&ots=E9IqKY0zHH&sig=IKyaZupksTMpFAzNan58EBKKudA&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=10&ct=result#PPA144,M1
here’s the meteo station Anthony
http://www.panoramio.com/photo/8225894
REPLY: Thanks for supplying it! I searched quite a long time. I must not have had the right key words. – Anthony
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/11/16/do1610.xml
In the late 50’s I was stationed in Alaska at Eielson AFB near Fairbanks. This base used a large coal plant to produce steam for local heat in most of the buildings. The pipes were underground and the snow generally melted over the pipeways. There was steam heat in the barracks, too. But one could not moderate the heat in the room because the piping would bang and snap very loudly if the heat was not on full force. So we opened the windows to moderate the temperature. Of course this caused icecycles to form from the eaves and form down to the open window, where we picked off our ice cubes fresh as needed for our beverages. The point is that if energy is free, the users will use it freely, not economically. You can bet your bottom dollar that that is what is happening in these northern Russian towns.
Conclusions from the Hinkel 2007 study:
Analysis of winter temperatures yields the following preliminary conclusions:
1. Based on spatial averages for the period 1 December 2001 to 31 March 2002, the urban area is 2.2 °C warmer than the rural area.
2. In winter, the daily UHIM (Td, u−r) increases with decreasing temperature, reaching a peak value of around 6 °C in January–February. This likely reflects higher energy usage for residential and commercial space heating.
3. The daily UHIM decreases with increasing wind velocity. Under calm conditions (< 4 knots or 2 m s−1) the daily UHIM is 3.2 °C in winter.
4. Daily UHIMs in winter can be predicted using mean daily air temperature for light wind conditions of less than 7 knots (<3.5 m s−1) with a reasonable degree of confidence (r2 = 0.65, p = 0.04).
5. On a daily basis, the UHI is best developed under calm, cold conditions and can reach hourly magnitudes exceeding 9 °C; this reflects the increased (anthropogenic) heat input at this high-latitude site. On very windy days, the temperature field across the study area is uniform.
Here is a satellite infrared image that shows small fires in Russia”
http://www.fire.uni-freiburg.de/photos/satex/nooa_avhrr/hotspot_4b.jpg
The red areas with plumes are the fires, but St Petersburg is the same shade red because of UHI.
Here are some pictures from the Urban Heat Island Pilot Project. It includes an infrared image of Sacramento:
http://science.nasa.gov/newhome/headlines/essd20nov98_1.htm
Correction: conclusions posted above were from Hinkel 2003.
From the 2005 study:
[48] Analysis of the 4-year temperature record from 68
sites covering the 150 km2 BUHIS study area yields several
conclusions.
[49] 1. The MUHID at Barrow demonstrates a strong
seasonal pattern, with a well-developed UHI in winter. Slightly negative magnitudes in summer reflect a maritime influence caused by episodic westerly winds.
[50] 2. In winter, the magnitude of the UHI increases with decreasing air temperature and reaches a peak in January- February. There is considerable interannual variability.
[51] 3. On the basis of rural and urban group averages for the period 1 December to 31 March of four winters, the urban area is 2C warmer than the rural area. It is notuncommon for the MUHID to exceed 4C.
[52] 4. The strongest heat islands are associated with calm days. When wind velocity is less than 3 m s1, the median daily MUHI value is 3.0C. Average daily wind of 3–6 m s1 are associated with MUHID values of 2.0– 2.5C, whereas windy days (>9 m s1) have daily MUHIs less than 0.5C.
[53] 5. Warmest temperatures are consistently observed in the urban core area. However, the magnitude and spatial pattern of the UHI is strongly dependent on daily weather conditions. These include wind velocity and direction, mean
daily temperature, and the influence of episodic events such as the opening of near-shore leads in the ice pack. On very windy days, the temperature field across the study area is uniform.
I guess the Russian people realize that if they shutdown nuclear and coal they will die in the snow. I hope no one in America thinks this type of response is ever justified.
http://www.pacificenvironment.org/article.php?id=2513
Though there are obviously many different theories out there as to what could be causing these anomalies, the most important (and suspicious) thing to me is that NH warm anomalies have been so consistent and extreme 1) in one particular area – eastern Russia (sparsely populated), and 2) the warm anomalies have been much greater in winter. This is indicative of something besides simple AGW…
http://www.panoramio.com/photo/8225894
posted at CA
REPLY: Thanks Mosh, I’ll do an update tomorrow.- Anthony
If, as the GISS ‘data’ would seem to indicate, that it is unseasonably warm in Russia, how does this square with reports of increasing Arctic ice cover? Surely if Russia is much warmer as is apparently claimed, then the ice caps should not be ‘recovering’ at the rate they appear to be as per your previous posts on the subject.
Just an observation you understand from an ‘uneducated’ observer, but if this is ‘warming’then it’s the strangest definition of temperature increase that I’ve ever heard of…..
Damned weather isn’t doing what it’s told.
I have no idea how to evaluate the potential impact of this. I do think that the incredible sloppiness of the entire termperature record is an enormous black eye for science. The idea that someone would use that garbage to demand enormous govt policy changes is horrifying.
Chris Ballance,
When you go to Russia, don’t forget to take a FLIR camera.
I’m a newbie here so I may have missed it, but is it possible to eliminate all Russian sites and look at the anomaly for the “rest of the world”?
All we need to do is look to UAH and RSS.
And remember, those half-a-dozen or so stations up around “old 80” are used to grid points north. So knocking them out eats quite a chunk.
I hear it through the grapevine that NASA is hastily re-revising it all as we spitball. Oh, what fun!
Bang! Bang! Bang!
Goes the farmer’s gun.
Run, Rabbit! Run, Rabbit!
Run! Run! Run!
I recently stumbled across this website after reading an article in the London Telegraph about temperature records from Russia caused NASA some embarrassment. I’m an electrician who works in a paper container manufacturing plant. We use great heaping amounts of steam. In the winter I can stand about 100 meters from the boiler room (outside the building) in the winter when it is below freezing and feel the heat from it on my face. In fact the snow will melt around the boiler room in a manner dictated by the wind. The melt follows the wind, usually to the South. At times the melt pattern has extended far beyond 100 meters. Cars parked in the “heat zone will be devoid of any ice on the windshields while cars either side of the area will have big thick sheets of ice on their windshields. From my personal experience I don’t doubt that the steam pipes in Russia are causing erroneous readings.
OK we know that Krasnoyarsk, Russia had the thermal power station down.
Looking up the temperature history they had a temperature jump by 20 F at 3 am in one hour, is that normal for Russian weather?
A close by town for Russian standards Tolmachevo has a similar temperature increase but spread over much longer time frame.
I find that odd maybe one of you experts want to follow this up a bit more?
http://www.wunderground.com/history/airport/UNKL/2008/1/5/DailyHistory.html?req_city=NA&req_state=NA&req_statename=NA
http://www.wunderground.com/history/airport/UNNT/2008/1/5/DailyHistory.html?req_city=NA&req_state=NA&req_statename=NA
WUWT makes a big splash in the Telegraph.
A surreal scientific blunder last week raised a huge question mark about the temperature records that underpin the worldwide alarm over global warming. On Monday, Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), which is run by Al Gore’s chief scientific ally, Dr James Hansen, and is one of four bodies responsible for monitoring global temperatures, announced that last month was the hottest October on record.
This was startling. Across the world there were reports of unseasonal snow and plummeting temperatures last month, from the American Great Plains to China, and from the Alps to New Zealand. China’s official news agency reported that Tibet had suffered its “worst snowstorm ever”. In the US, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration registered 63 local snowfall records and 115 lowest-ever temperatures for the month, and ranked it as only the 70th-warmest October in 114 years.
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So what explained the anomaly? GISS’s computerised temperature maps seemed to show readings across a large part of Russia had been up to 10 degrees higher than normal. But when expert readers of the two leading warming-sceptic blogs, Watts Up With That and Climate Audit, began detailed analysis of the GISS data they made an astonishing discovery. The reason for the freak figures was that scores of temperature records from Russia and elsewhere were not based on October readings at all. Figures from the previous month had simply been carried over and repeated two months running.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/11/16/do1610.xml
Nice post. There’s obviously a lot of leverage on these stations. Warwick Hughes wrote about them about 7-8 years ago.
I think that the divergence between GHCN-Daily and GHCN-Monthly is a different issue though. Physical things wouldn’t cause this divergence – it has to ba an adjustment somewhere.
This should get you the “Fickle Finger of Fate” award for sure! It’s like reading a plot twist in a good book, or listening to a great cliff hanger on the radio. (Taking care of course to discreetly tune the “little radio dials” while curled up indoors in front of a warm fire) 😉
This is just the sort of thing one would expect the voracious media to exploit. Here’s hoping!
Damn fine work sir!
Piping: Central steam systems add a new wrinkle to UHI’s. Often, in the US, insulation is for personnel protection only and limits the exterior of the jacketing to <140°F. That’s still pretty hot. Power conservation requires thicker insulation to conserve power, and yields lower jacket temperatures.
Obviously, steam leakage would have more drastic UHI consequences, especially if the site temperature sensor is located close to and downwind of the leak.
Verkhojansk sensor location: My gut feeling is that all is well in Verkhojansk. Judging from the photo, the station is outside the town. Maybe. Note, though, that the satellite map may show the wrong location. Zooming in on the map pin reveals a roof that (to me) looks nothing like the station shown in the picture.
Also, based on the windows in the tower, it houses a stairway to the instrument platform. A good question would be: are the stairs heated? If so, unless the roof is insulated, there may be a significant heat plume across the instruments. Another question is, where exactly is the thermometer mounted?)
Good investigation! Maybe extra degrees from some stations gives a bias of tenth of degrees in total. (Probably Russia isn’t known as the most quality minded country…) But RSS confirms a warm Russian october (we can’t expect the positive anomaly to be changed to a negative) :
http://global-warming.accuweather.com/octrssanom-thumb.png
Richard M: I don’t think so. To exclude dozens of stations on such a large area (which happens to have strong positive anomaly) should produce a larger error for the global data than a few to warm stations may produce.
But GISS data quality isn’t very good. This october error (with the September values) I think will made more ppl to put trust in satellite data instead.
But this investigation of bias is very good and nessecary!
The steam or hot water supply pipes will almost certainly be insulated as they really dont want to lose that heat even in Russia. The uninsulated pipes will be the condensate or cold water return pipes which are probably not very hot but could still affect the UHI in the area when there is not much wind.
Anthony – fascinating prospects.
Check for Date ON/OFF for District Heating
Somewhere I heard or read that in good centralized bureaucratic methodology, some district heating systems were officially turned on at a certain date in the fall and off in the spring – regardless of how cold or hot the weather was before that. So houses could get very cold waiting for the district heating to be turned on. Similarly, temperature control was typically by opening and closing the windows, with little regulation of the steam flow, as noted above.
Suggest exploring the temperature anomaly versus time, to see if there is a jump up/down where there were specific dates formally set to turn the district heating on/off. It may require daily temperature data to track this rather than the monthly data discussed above.
I can’t lay my hands on the source at the moment. It may have been in China, or Mongolia and not Russia. However, I would expect similar effects across states with such centralized planning and control.