How not to measure temperature, part 88 – Honolulu's Official Temperature ±2

People send me stuff, some days my email explodes. Today I got all sorts of things about Obama and John Holdren and the new NCDC climate spincycle which Steve McIntyre has dubbed Chucky Returns Part IV. That one made me laugh out loud.

Something else that made me laugh today was this well done story (h/t to Andrew Walden) from reporter Tina Chau of KGMB-TV in Honolulu, HI. The NWS spokesman Tom Birchard was clearly flummoxed, and at the end of the interview said exactly what I’ve always said about the ASOS system and measurement of climate data at airports. Comedian George Carlin was right in his “Hippy dippy weatherman routine”: Why do they always give the temperature for the airport? Nobody LIVES there!

“ASOS…placed for aviation purposes…not necessarily for  climate purposes.”

Yet, ASOS weather stations at airports worldwide are in fact used for climate, and are part of the official climate record. In the US alone, there are 64 ASOS stations (that I’ve found so far) in the official USHCN climate record, plus there are hundreds in GHCN worldwide.  In my studies of the USHCN temperature network, I’ve found dozens of such poor siting examples even at non-airports. See my report here (PDF, 4 MB).

Our old friend the ASOS and HO-83 temperature sensors may be up to tricks again in Honolulu. It seems the temperature is a wee bit off and new records are being set by the ASOS weather station at the airport. I’m reminded of the similar situation in Tucson years ago that went on a long time before anybody caught it. I’ve found the HNL station, seen below. It is located at lat/lon 21.32403 -157.939467 There’s more than meets the eye. More after the news story.

Honolulu Airport Weather Station - click for live interactive map view
Honolulu Airport Weather Station - click for live interactive map view

Honolulu Temperature Records Questioned

Written by Tina Chau

The high in Honolulu Monday was 92 degrees. It was the hottest June 15 since the National Weather Service started keeping track and the 8th straight day we’ve broken or tied a record. But was it really that hot?

That’s what the experts at the NWS have been wondering. They settled their suspicions with a trip to the airport to check Honolulu’s official temperature sensor.

“We had one of our technicians visit the site and they did a side-by-side calibration and found the thermometer at the Honolulu International Airport was reading a little warmer than what his caliberation thermometer was reading,” said Tom Birchard, a meteorologist at the NWS.

It was two degrees warmer. There’s some wiggle room with the accuracy of the temperature sensor.

“Which means, if the reading is 90, the thermometer is only accurate to read within about two degrees so it could be anywhere between 88 degrees and 92 degrees.

Which means our records these past eight days may not be records after all.

“If it turns out, after further investigation of the thermometer the data were skewed,” said Birchard, “they could be stricken.”


Now see these ground level photos I’ve found of the HNL ASOS courtesy of NCDC’s photo library of ASOS weather stations.

Not only is there a faulty sensor at HNL, as indicated by the NWS meteorologist in the news story, take a good look at the site photo below.  The HO-83 temperature sensor is the little white mushroom shaped device.

Hygrothermometer
The HO83 ASOS thermohygrometer - the same type used in Honolulu
Honolulu ASOS looking south - click for larger image
Honolulu ASOS looking south - click for larger image

There’s an asphalt access road directly adjacent to the ASOS temperature sensor. Plus a heat generating power transformer, and the requisite air conditioner exhaust for the ILS electronics building.

As we know from common experience, temperatures are almost always warmer near asphalt than natural soil or ground cover. From a scientific perspective we can cite either Yilmaz et al (PDF 2008 ) and the measurements of temperature differences over such surfaces, or we can reference NOAA’s Climate Reference Network Handbook which rates the likely temperature error of such placements.

See the Climate Reference Network Site Handbook (PDF 2002) including explanation of the CRN 1-5 rating system used by surfacestations.org

Honolulu ASOS looking southwest - click for larger image
Honolulu ASOS looking southwest - click for larger image
Honolulu ASOS looking north
Honolulu ASOS looking north - click for larger image

How close is the temperature sensor to the asphalt? I decided to use Google Earth’s measurement tool:

Honolulu ASOS measurement view - click for larger image
Honolulu ASOS measurement view - click for larger image

The answer: 1.6 meters, about 5 feet.

But what’s a little asphalt when the temperature sensor is surrounded by a sea of it at HNL?

Honolulu's ASOS temperature sensor - surrounded by asphalt - click for larger image
Honolulu's ASOS temperature sensor - surrounded by asphalt - click for larger image

The 2 degree temperature error in the ASOS record was only found because it exceeded the June 15th high temperature record for Honolulu. It seemed “odd” enough for somebody to check to be sure.

Honolulu surface temperature record - source NASA GISS
Honolulu Airport GISS surface temperature record plot - source NASA GISS

So the question we have now is, how much of the data in the plot above from NASA GISS is from influences such as urban growth, airport expansion, etc.  I’ve confirmed that GISS uses the Honolulu Airport for climate data since their ID of 425911820000:

GISS_honolulu_numericID
click for larger image

Matches that of the National Climatic Data Center description for Honolulu Airport’s WMO code (91182)

click for larger image
click for larger image

Note the big step change in 1960 in the HNL airport data plot. Hawaii became the 50th US state in 1959. So it would stand to reason that 1960 would be a period of growth at the airport, or perhaps a station move to a warmer location. According to the National Climate Data Center, the ASOS station was installed on February 1st, 1998. Since then, the temperature swings appear to have been larger than in prior years.

But the nearby Honolulu Observatory temperature record doesn’t seem to have much of a trend, though it no longer measures temperature for climate records, a pity:

Honolulu Observatory GISS station plot
Honolulu Observatory GISS surface temperature record plot - click for larger image

When dealing with climate change, it is generally accepted that the amount of temperature rise attributable is about 0.7°C or about 1.3°F. With errors of 2 degrees or more creeping into the climate record due to faulty equipment and poor station placement, are we so certain?

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WTH
June 18, 2009 6:48 am

“I’ve confirmed that GISS uses the Honolulu Airport for climate data since their ID of 425911820000”
Do they? I see HONOLULU OBS OAHU and HONOLULU, OAH (the two near stations shown below the quote) but not the Honolulu Airport in GISS’s “list of stations actually used”:
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/station_data/station_list.txt
It does show up in the “full list”:
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/station_data/v2.temperature.inv.txt
The above links in context are here:
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/station_data/

Steve McIntyre
June 18, 2009 8:59 am

Does anyone know why the Honolulu Observatory data ends in the 1980s? Did they stop measuring or did GHCN stop collecting the information from them?

June 26, 2009 12:09 am

I worked for the NWS Division of Climatology in Honolulu in the early 1970’s, before my 29 year career as a TV meteorologist. We had a similar problem with record temperatures being recorded every day at HNL. Since other stations were NOT recording record temperatures it became obvious that something was wrong with the readings. An investigation by the Star-Bulletin found that black aviation oil was being dumped at the temperature observing site. It took about a year of arm twisting, but eventually the oil was cleaned up.
We, at the Division of Climatology, could not get the forecast office guys to admit there was a problem and fix it. It took the newspaper expose to get someone to do something about the oil.
During the past couple of years the temperatures at HNL began to increase relative to other nearby stations. A simple comparision with those stations, and other statewide temperatures, shows that by mid June the HNL readings had hit 3-4 degrees higher than an index of other Oahu stations and other statewide stations. This is much more than a “couple of degrees”. The bogus readings should be removed from the official record.
I sent a detailed email with a thorough statistical analysis to the NWS office in Honolulu and did not receive a response. I also sent the same email to one of the Honolulu TV stations that had been advertising the record temperatures and they even did a live story on The Weather Channel about the record heat. Of course, I have yet to receive a response.
I would suggest to anyone reading this that they do a similar, simple statistical comparison of HNL vs any other Hawaii temperature station. You’ll immediately see the 3-4 degree variance into mid June compared with past months and years.
REPLY: Spot on Tom, and welcome. – Anthony