One of the most ridiculous claims recently related to Menne et al 2010 and my surfacestations project was a claim made by DeSmogBlog (and Huffington Post who carried the story also) is that the “Urban Heat Island Myth is Dead“.
To clarify for these folks: Elvis is dead, UHI is not.
For disbelievers, let’s look at a few cases showing UHI to be alive and well.
CASE 1: I’ve measured it myself, in the city of Reno for example:

The UHI signature of Reno, NV – Click for larger image
Read the story of how I created this graph here The procedure and raw data is there if you want to check my work.
I chose Reno for two reasons. It was close to me, and it is the centerpiece of a NOAA training manual on how to site weather stations to avoid UHI effects.
CASE 2: NOAA shows their own measurements that mesh well with mine:
To back that up, the NOAA National Weather Service includes the UHI factor in one of it’s training course ( NOAA Professional Competency Unit 6 ) using Reno, NV.
In the PCU6 they were also kind enough to provide a photo essay of their own as well as a graph. You can click the aerial photo to get a Google Earth interactive view of the area. The ASOS USHCN station is right between the runways.

This is NOAA’s graph showing the changes to the official climate record when they made station moves:

Source for 24a and 24b: NOAA Internal Training manual, 2004-2007
Oops, moving the station south caused a cooling. Fixed now, all better.
What is striking about this is that here we have NOAA documenting the effects of an “urban heat bubble” something that DeSmog Blog says ” is dead”, plus we have NOAA documenting a USHCN site with known issues, held up as a bad example for training the operational folks, being used in a case study for the new USHCN2 system.
So if NOAA trains for UHI placement, I’m comfortable in saying that DesmogBlog claims of UHI being “dead” are pure rubbish. But let’s not stop there.
CASE 3: From an embattled scientist.
A paper in JGR that slipped in 2007 without much notice (but known now thanks to Warwick Hughes) is one from Phil Jones, the “former” director of the Hadley Climate Center in the UK. The paper is titled: Urbanization effects in large-scale temperature records, with an emphasis on China
In it, Jones identifies an urban warming signal in China of 0.1 degrees C per decade. Or, if you prefer, 1 degree C per century. Not negligible by any means. Here is the abstract:
Global surface temperature trends, based on land and marine data, show warming of about 0.8°C over the last 100 years. This rate of warming is sometimes questioned because of the existence of well-known Urban Heat Islands (UHIs). We show examples of the UHIs at London and Vienna, where city center sites are warmer than surrounding rural locations. Both of these UHIs however do not contribute to warming trends over the 20th century because the influences of the cities on surface temperatures have not changed over this time. In the main part of the paper, for China, we compare a new homogenized station data set with gridded temperature products and attempt to assess possible urban influences using sea surface temperature (SST) data sets for the area east of the Chinese mainland. We show that all the land-based data sets for China agree exceptionally well and that their residual warming compared to the SST series since 1951 is relatively small compared to the large-scale warming. Urban-related warming over China is shown to be about 0.1°C decade−1 over the period 1951–2004, with true climatic warming accounting for 0.81°C over this period.
Even though Jones tries to minimize the UHI effect elsewhere, saying the UHI trends don’t contribute to warming in London and Vienna, what is notable about the paper is that Jones has been minimizing the UHI issues for years and now does an about face on China.
Jones may have tried to hide CRU data, but he’s right about China.
CASE 4: From “The Dog ate My Data” who writes:
The Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) blames Melbourne’s equal warmest overnight temperature of 30.6 degrees, on January 12 on the heat island effect. The previous time the city was that hot overnight was February 1, 1902.
The Age newspaper cites a meteorologist at the bureau, Harvey Stern,
Melbourne recorded its equal warmest overnight temperature, 30.6 degrees, on January 12. The previous time the city was that hot overnight was February 1, 1902.
A meteorologist at the bureau, Harvey Stern, said that Melbourne suffered from a heat island effect, in which a city is warmer than the surrounding countryside.
This was the case especially at night, because of heat stored in bricks and concrete and trapped between close-packed buildings.
I am stunned if that is correct firstly because BOM isn’t blaming Global Warming and secondly that the urban heat island effect directly receives the blame. With faults in the 2007 IPCC’s AR4 now pouring out I guess it is not suprising that attributions of weather events are now, shall we say, possibly becoming more circumspect.
CASE 5: Heatzilla stomps Tokyo
From the website “science of doom” who writes:
New Research from Japan
Detection of urban warming in recent temperature trends in Japan by Fumiaki Fujibe was published in the International Journal of Climatology (2009). It is a very interesting paper which I’ll comment on in this post.
The abstract reads:
The contribution of urban effects on recent temperature trends in Japan was analysed using data at 561 stations for 27 years (March 1979–February 2006). Stations were categorized according to the population density of surrounding few kilometres. There is a warming trend of 0.3–0.4 °C/decade even for stations with low population density (<100 people per square kilometre), indicating that the recent temperature increase is largely contributed by background climatic change. On the other hand, anomalous warming trend is detected for stations with larger population density. Even for only weakly populated sites with population density of 100–300/km2, there is an anomalous trend of 0.03–0.05 °C/decade. This fact suggests that urban warming is detectable not only at large cities but also at slightly urbanized sites in Japan. Copyright, 2008 Royal Meteorological Society.
Why the last 27 years?
The author first compares the temperature over 100 years as measured in Tokyo in the central business district with that in Hachijo Island, 300km south.
Tokyo – 3.1°C rise over 100 years (1906-2006)
Hachijo Island – 0.6°C over the same period

This certainly indicates a problem, but to do a thorough study over the last 100 years is impossible because most temperature stations with a long history are in urban areas.
However, at the end of the 1970’s, the Automated Meteorological Data Acquisition System (AMeDAS) was deployed around Japan providing hourly temperature data at 800 stations. The temperature data from these are the basis for the paper. The 27 years coincides with the large temperature rise (see above) of around 0.3-0.4°C globally.
And the IPCC (2007) summarized the northern hemisphere land-based temperature measurements from 1979- 2005 as 0.3°C per decade.
How was Urbanization measured?
The degree of urbanization around each site was calculated from grid data of population and land use, because city populations often used as an index of urban size (Oke, 1973; Karl et al., 1988; Fujibe, 1995) might not be representative of the thermal environment of a site located outside the central area of a city.
What were the Results?
The x-axis, D3, is a measure of population density. T’mean is the change in the mean temperature per decade.
Tmean is the average of all of the hourly temperature measurements, it is not the average of Tmax and Tmin.
Notice the large scatter – this shows why having a large sample is necessary. However, in spite of that, there is a clear trend which demonstrates the UHI effect.
There is large scatter among stations, indicating the dominance of local factors’ characteristic to each station. Nevertheless, there is a positive correlation of 0.455 (Tmean = 0.071 logD3 + 0.262 °C), which is significant at the 1% level, between logD3 and Tmean.
Here’s the data summarized with T’mean as well as the T’max and T’min values. Note that D3 is population per km2 around the point of temperature measurement, and remember that the temperature values are changes per decade:
Note that, as observed by many researchers in other regions, especially Roger Pielke Sr, the Tmin values are the most problematic – demonstrating the largest UHI effect. Average temperatures for land-based stations globally are currently calculated from the average of Tmax and Tmin, and in many areas globally it is the Tmin which has shown the largest anomalies. But back to our topic under discussion..
And for those confused about how the Tmean can be lower than the Tmin value in each population category, it is because we are measuring anomalies from decade to decade.
And the graphs showing the temperature anomalies by category (population density):
Quantifying the UHI value
Now the author carries out an interesting step:
As an index of net urban trend, the departure of T from its average for surrounding non-urban stations was used on the assumption that regional warming was locally uniform.
That is, he calculates the temperature deviation in each station in category 3-6 with the locally relevant category 1 and 2 (rural) stations. (There were not enough category 1 stations to do it with just category 1). The calculation takes into account how far away the “rural” stations are, so that more weight is given to closer stations.
Estimate of actual UHI by referencing the closest rural stations – again categorized by population density
And the relevant table:
Conclusion
Here’s what the author has to say:
On the one hand, it indicates the presence of warming trend over 0.3 °C/decade in Japan, even at non-urban stations. This fact confirms that recent rapid warming at Japanese cities is largely attributable to background temperature rise on the large scale, rather than the development of urban heat islands.
..However, the analysis has also revealed the presence of significant urban anomaly. The anomalous trend for the category 6, with population density over 3000 km−2 or urban surface coverage over 50%, is about 0.1 °C/decade..
..This value may be small in comparison to the background warming trend in the last few decades, but they can have substantial magnitude when compared with the centennial global trend, which is estimated to be 0.74°C/century for 1906–2005 (IPCC, 2007). It therefore requires careful analysis to avoid urban influences in evaluating long-term temperature changes.
So, in this very thorough study, in Japan at least, the temperature rise that has been measured over the last few decades is a solid result. The temperature increase from 1979 – 2006 has been around 0.3°C/decade
However, in the larger cities the actual measurement will be overstated by 25%.
And in a time of lower temperature rise, the UHI may be swamping the real signal.
The degree of urbanization around each site was calculated from grid data of population and land use, because city populations often used as an index of urban size (Oke, 1973; Karl et al., 1988; Fujibe, 1995) might not be representative of the thermal environment of a site located outside the central area of a city.
Case 6: California Counties by population show a distinct UHI signature.
My friend Jim Goodridge, former California State Climatologist identified the statewide UHI signature issues way back in 1996. This graph had a profound effect on me, becuase it was the one that really made an impact on me, switching my views to being skeptical. Yes, I used to be a warmer, but that’s another story.
Goodridge, J.D. (1996) Comments on “Regional Simulations of Greenhouse Warming including Natural Variability” . Bull, Amer. Meteorological Society 77:1588-1599.
Goodrich (1996) showed the importance of urbanization to temperatures in his study of California counties in 1996. He found for counties with a million or more population the warming from 1910 to 1995 was 4F, for counties with 100,000 to 1 million it was 1F and for counties with less than 100,000 there was no change (0.1F).

He’s been quietly toiling away in his retirement on his computer for the last 15 years or so making all sort of data comparisons. One plot which he shared with me in 2003 is a 104 year plot map of California showing station trends after painstakingly hand entering data into an Excel spreadsheet and plotting slopes of the data to produce trend dots.
He used every good continuous piece of data he could get his hands on, no adjusted data like the climate modelers use, only raw from Cooperative Observing Stations, CDF stations, Weather Service Office’s and Municipal stations.
The results are quite interesting. Here it is:
I’ll have more interesting revelations from Jim Goodridge soon.
Case 7: NASA JPL’s climatologist says UHI is an issue
This press release from NASA Jet Propulsion Lab says that most of the increase in temperature has to do with ubanization:
[NASA’s JPL Bill] Patzert says global warming due to increasing greenhouse gases is responsible for some of the overall heating observed in Los Angeles and the rest of California. Most of the increase in heat days and length of heat waves, however, is due to a phenomenon called the “urban heat island effect.”
Heat island-induced heat waves are a growing concern for urban and suburban dwellers worldwide. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, studies around the world have shown that this effect makes urban areas from 2 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit (1 to 6 degrees Celsius) warmer than their surrounding rural areas.
Patzert says this effect is steadily warming Southern California, though more modestly than some larger urban areas around the world. “Dramatic urbanization has resulted in an extreme makeover for Southern California, with more homes, lawns, shopping centers, traffic, freeways and agriculture, all absorbing and retaining solar radiation, making our megalopolis warmer,” Patzert said.
CASE 8: You can see it from space. NASA (not the GISS division) measures it. Here’s a report they presented at the last AGU meeting in December 2009. Gee, that curve below looks like Reno, NV, doesn’t it?

The urban heat island effect can raise temperatures within cities as much as 5 C higher than the surrounding countryside. New data suggests that the effect is more or less pronounced depending on the type of landscape — forest or desert — the city replaced. Credit: NASA


NASA researchers studying urban landscapes have found that the intensity of the “heat island” created by a city depends on the ecosystem it replaced and on the regional climate. Urban areas developed in arid and semi-arid regions show far less heating compared with the surrounding countryside than cities built amid forested and temperate climates.
“The placement and structure of cities — and what was there before — really does matter,” said Marc Imhoff, biologist and remote sensing specialist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. “The amount of the heat differential between the city and the surrounding environment depends on how much of the ground is covered by trees and vegetation. Understanding urban heating will be important for building new cities and retrofitting existing ones.”
Goddard researchers including Imhoff, Lahouari Bounoua, Ping Zhang, and Robert Wolfe presented their findings on Dec. 16 in San Francisco at the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
Satellite imagery of suburban (top) and urban Atlanta shows the differences in daytime heating, as caused by the urban heat island effect. Credit: NASA Goddard’s Scientific Visualization Studio
Yep, UHI is alive and well. Anybody with an automobile dashboard thermometer who drives a commute from country to city can easily measure UHI, and you don’t have to be a climate scientist to prove it to yourself.
UPDATE: For a primer on how UHI is not dealt with by NOAA and CRU, have a look at this Climate Audit post:
Realclimate and Disinformation on UHI
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“Urban Heat Island Myth is Dead“.
They should talk to James Hansen. He knows it’s alive and well. He uses it in his product.
“Urban Heat Island Myth is Dead“
Huh, then what’s this?:
http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/photos/surface-stations/tucson_arizona-labelled.jpg
OT: Another of Monckton’s interviews on the radio in Oz
http://blogs.abc.net.au/victoria/2010/02/the-scare-is-over-climate-change-skeptic-lord-monckton-debates-rupert-posner-from-the-climate-group.html?program=melbourne_mornings
Anthony,
If you read beyond the headline of the Desmogblog, you would see that “Urban Heat Island Myth is Dead“ was shorthand for the point that the urban heat island effects are not having a significant impact on the global temperature data sets that we are using to look at global warming.
It was not a claim that urban heat islands do not exist.
REPLY: Oh I understand, but you don’t get to read my email. Many Huffponians were convinced by the title alone. At least my title is accurate, and that the purpose is to show (for those folks that can’t read past the title) that UHI remains an issue.
But then again, you gripe about most everything here. So I’m not surprised you’d gripe about this too. Oh, you might want to read this from McIntyre, as your scifi hereos don’t seem to correct for it:
http://climateaudit.org/2009/01/20/realclimate-and-disinformation-on-uhi/
– A
I spend a lot of time wandering the northern nevada deserts day and night. Temperatures are always warmer, summer and winter at night in the city than out in the boondocks (even when the boondocks are significantly lower in elevation. Driving at night is always interesting,especially on windless nights. Temperatures vary extensively based on topography (rocky areas are always warmer). On still nights when you drop into low spots, it can get bone chilling, but when you rise in elevation out of the cold sinking air pool, its suddenly warm and pleasant…these transitions are always seemingly instantaneous. Near creaks and rivers, its always very noticeably colder. Topography, and geology have massive impacts. Transition zones between warm and cold are short, and in most cases utterly predictable if you know and watch the land. Mr watts would have a field day doing a night drive in my cruiser with his thermometers. The surface of one small valley can range in temperature by 20 degrees simultaneously, but we are supposed to believe they can calculate temperatures from 1200 miles away from somewhere with an altitude difference of over a mile.
In the CASE 5: Heatzilla stomps Tokyo, the Japan author partly summarizes – ” On the one hand, it indicates the presence of warming trend over 0.3 °C/decade in Japan, even at non-urban stations. This fact confirms that recent rapid warming at Japanese cities is largely attributable to background temperature rise on the large scale, rather than the development of urban heat islands. ”
This appears to me to be consistent with Anthony’s statement in the CASE 5 – ” And the IPCC (2007) summarized the northern hemisphere land-based temperature measurements from 1979- 2005 as 0.3°C per decade. ”
So, I haven’t done homework about whether other independent (of IPCC AR4 )papers on northern hemisphere land masses show this consistency with the AR4. Sorry.
BUT, has anyone here done homework about if the AR4 statement is consistent with other land masses, like it is with Japan?
John
I’m a first time contributor (FTC), long time reader (LTR).
The R=0.455 value is not that good of a correlation. Were the temperature stations placed directly in the middle of the city and in which direction did temperature get measured from the city? Was it measured out over the ocean or in towards a desert? What I’m saying is that I highly doubt there is a convenient circular arrangement of stations around the “UHI” of interest to give a symmetrical arrangent of temperatures radiating farther out from the original station(s) within the city. What you could be measuring is the variance between multiple stations because of location such as latitude and altitude (more importantly) rather than the temperatures of what the city raises the avg temperature. This is not to eliminate the UHI effect but to suggest other experimental and procedural (as well as bias) errors are effecting the claim of where all attributable temperature increase comes from. A map of where the stations had their data collected from would be entirely relevant especially along with their altitude.
Just an extra piece of skeptical reading from me is that the pressure systems could be altered significantly from many events such as the UHI or if there was localized melting of glacial patterns etc. Given this possibility where high or low temperatures may become altered relatively altering the flow from what used to be a high pressure system of air into a cooler one, where the flow of air is coming from each station could describe (depending on the location of the measuring station obviously) either an increase in the UHI temperatures or a decrease. So if you were to take for instance the night data as opposed to the day data you could find if there was a significant change in the mixing from wind factors and judge whether there exists a deviation of the temperatures but you could also check for a history of the high and low pressure systems of the areas and if they are altered in any significant way (per statistical analysis which i know you like to do).
4 billion (18:52:46) :
“If UHI is influential, why does land based temperature data show close agreement with Satellite data?”
With 70% of the earth’s surface covered by water what is the likelihood they would differ beyond the amount they DO differ?
Anthony — When I said no UHI here I was joking. It was pretty obvious on this evening (7 Jan), the entire city except for low areas along US 30 at the city’s west edge, was at least 1F warmer than countryside.
REPLY: Well if you want to do it for real with a datalogger, let me know and I’ll send you one. Might make an interesting student lab study. – Anthony
I agree with Mervin that R=.455 is pretty sketchy for drawing any substantial conclusions. The plot doesn’t look to be much more than a cloud of points.
I think the study needs to fine tuned a bit.
Recent California climate variability: spatial and temporal patterns in temperature trends (CLIMATE RESEARCH, February 2007)
Steve LaDochy, Richard Medina, and William Patzert
“If we assume that global warming affects all regions of the state, then the small increases seen in rural stations can be an estimate of this general warming pattern over land. Larger increases must then be due to local or regional surface changes. Using climatic division data, the fastest rates of warming were recorded in the southern California divisions, where urbanization has been greatest. The least warming occurred in the Central Valley, with the more irrigated south (San Joaquin drainage) having greater warming than the less irrigated north (Sacramento drainage). The NE Interior Basins division had cooling over the period of record, although most stations in the northern divisions had insignificant rates of change.”
“The largest temperature increases were seen in the state’s urban areas, led by Southern California and the San Francisco Bay area. . .”
If the excess warming occured only in urban areas, I think we can conslude that UHI exists.
The temp drops at least 5 degrees between Palmdale/Lancaster, CA and Rosamond…. Every morning on my drive to work
A few years ago I attended a seminar for wx spotters. Those attending were ham radio people. The meteorologist giving part of the presentation said that it was believed that the reason that the city of Chicago had never been struck by a tornado was the city generated so much heat and the heat prevented it.
For Marvin, I’m not much of a statistician I’m afraid. The significance levels are derived from how reliable the fit is – and they are mostly 99%, with a few at 95%.
There is a lot of data with a lot of scatter – but still a significant trend. Confidence in the trend increases with number of points sampled (which is a lot).
The high level of scatter is one of the most interesting points about the paper. Looking at just a few stations might easily send you off in the wrong direction. Micro-climate effects are very influential and maybe impossible to predict in advance.
The other significant point about the paper was the verification of high “real” surface temperature warming over Japan for the period of the study.
I didn’t understand your question “which direction did temperature get measured from the city?” These are stations measuring the temperature at specific locations throughout Japan. The researcher explored the temperatures recorded to the population density at that point (not in the center of the city).
http://scienceofdoom.com
CO2: An insignificant trace gas?
The main RSS feed seems to have died.
Pete
Hey there Joel Shore, I remember you telling me you had nothing to do with Desmogblog when I asked you about the lies they posted about my father. What do you have to say about that now? Your credibility is in question.
You don’t have to be a scientist to notice that it’s hotter in the middle of any town/city with bitumen streets, buildings and no trees, than it is in the surrounding countryside with trees, grass and only the occasional building. They must drive around in air conditioned cars and work in air conditioned offices to make statements such as that. UHI is alive and well !
An article said that in Israel (I think that’s right) home owners are required to white-wash their roofs every year. Seems they realize UHI is very real and move to minimize it.
Good post Anthony, UHI is alive and well at Canberra Airport too – 0.3 degrees C per decade, and has been fed for years into global trends. See my post on 12 Jan 2010
I can say the Japanese study by Fujibe (Case Study) is an utter bogus, because the years since 1979 constitues the very period where dramatical urbanization took place all over Japan.
Until 1960s where the Olympiad was held in Tokyo (1964), mostl parts of Japan were rural and cars were rarely seen in the countryside. At a number of stations keeping a long observation record, the temperatures exhibit no clear trend whatsoever from the 1880s up to 1960-70s, but show a remarkable rise thereafter, 1 to 2 degC for middle-sized cities and 0.5 to 1 degC even for small cities/towns.
I ment Case Study 5. Sorry.
http://www.investigatemagazine.com/hessell1980.pdf
This is a 1980 analysis of NZ weather stations showing the effect of UHI and particularly shelter, and the way these have interacted to increase temps by about 1C.
Note it was produced to counter the allegations of then young guns Salinger and Trenberth, now famous in the Climategate emails.
JC
Case 7’s link to the JPL climate site seems to have been removed, or redirected?
Thanks for the link to the temp/humidity data logger. I’ll be looking into one.
REPLY: The link was orphaned and then redirected to the main page by NASA’s new climate website for some reason, alternate found, fixed. – Anthony
Sal (20:55:34) : Correct Sal, but more importantly, it is affecting the averaging, especially when certain stations are used (urban) and others tossed out (rural). Their claim of “nothing to see here” is ignorant. I will decide for myself if there is nothing to the effect of UHI. I guess it is hard for me to fathom that there are people out there who would just accept their claim of irrelevance.
http://www.ide.titech.ac.jp/~icuc7/extended…/362428-3-090430175623-002.pdf
http://ams.confex.com/ams/pdfpapers/144519.pdf
http://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/100035
Anthony, Long ago when we were discussing the Parker paper I was begging everyone to take a look at the BUBBLE study. Have a look. a very detailed look at the problem
lpas.epfl.ch/MOD/publi/rotachetal(05).pdf
There is also a website somewhere.. arrg
http://pages.unibas.ch/geo/mcr/Projects/BUBBLE/textpages/ov_frameset.en.htm