Himalayan warming – pulling another thread from IPCC’s fragile tapestry.

Himalayas from Space - Image: NASA

Guest post by Marc Hendrickx

The case for dangerous man made global warming hangs on the wall like a frayed medieval tapestry. By pulling just one loose thread the whole thing starts to unravel. We pulled one of those threads recently…

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) was recently caught making a mistake in a report on melting ice on Mount Everest. The ABC claimed that “Studies show temperatures are rising faster at Mount Everest than in the rest of South Asia.” When ABC were requested to provide details of the “Studies” they cited Table 10.2 from  IPCC’s AR4 Working Group 2 report. However, contrary to ABC’s claims this table showed that the area of fastest rising temperature in South Asia was Sri Lanka, not the Himalaya (and hence not Mt Everest). ABC’s gaffe however served to highlight a few errors made by the IPCC.  It turns out the IPCC incorrectly cited references that backed up the Himalayan temperature trends in Table 10.2, citing two conference papers and one peer reviewed paper that related to precipitation, not temperature (also covered in Table 10.2). Additionally references to support the high Sri Lankan temperatures appear to be from conference papers not from peer reviewed journal articles-(Follow references in Table 10.2).

After some digging the original work on the Himalayan temperature trends was found to be:

Shrestha, Arun B.; Wake, Cameron P.; Mayewski, Paul A.; Dibb, Jack E., 1999. Maximum Temperature Trends in the Himalaya and Its Vicinity: An Analysis Based on Temperature Records from Nepal for the Period 1971–94. Journal of Climate, 9/1/99, Vol. 12 Issue 9 pp:2775-2786.

It’s odd that the IPCC could not find more recent to back up its claims of rapid warming in the Himalaya in AR4. Readers may re-call the IPCC has a tainted record in reporting climate change  in the Himalaya having been caught out using “grey literature” to back claims that Himalayan glaciers would disappear by 2035. These have now been shown to be false and the IPCC has issued a correction.

IPCC’s trend of 0.09º C.yr-1 for the Himalaya cited in Table 10.2 comes from Table 2 of Shrestha et al., 1999. This presents the regional mean temperature trends for the period 1977-1994 (just 17 years) based on a Kriging analysis. This is a geostatistical method of filling data gaps, great when you are calculating the extent of an ore body with loads of drill hole information but not so good when the data are limited, as is the case here. For the Himalaya, the IPCC also cherry pick the highest seasonal value, the figure for winter (0.09º C.yr-1). The annual figure given by Shrestha et al., 1999 is less: 0.057º C.yr-1.

But that’s not the end of the story; let’s look at the paper by Shrestha et al, 1999 in more detail. It provides an analysis of maximum temperature data from 49 stations in Nepal.

The abstract states:

Analyses of maximum temperature data from 49 stations in Nepal for the period 1971–94 reveal warming trends after 1977 ranging from 0.06 to 0.12C yr-1 in most of the Middle Mountain and Himalayan regions, while the Siwalik and Terai (southern plains) regions show warming trends less than 0.03C yr-1. The subset of records (14 stations) extending back to the early 1960s suggests that the recent warming trends were preceded by similar widespread cooling trends. Distributions of seasonal and annual temperature trends show high rates of warming in the high-elevation regions of the country (Middle Mountains and Himalaya), while low warming or even cooling trends were found in the southern regions. This is attributed to the sensitivity of mountainous regions to climate changes. The seasonal temperature trends and spatial distribution of temperature trends also highlight the influence of monsoon circulation.

The Kathmandu record, the longest in Nepal (1921–94), shows features similar to temperature trends in the Northern Hemisphere, suggesting links between regional trends and global scale phenomena. However, the magnitudes of trends are much enhanced in the Kathmandu as well as in the all-Nepal records. The authors’ analyses suggest that contributions of urbanization and local land use/cover changes to the all-Nepal record are minimal and that the all-Nepal record provides an accurate record of temperature variations across the entire region.

The time covered for the bulk of stations does not cover a single climate cycle so it’s hard to get excited about the results and we assume someone, somewhere will provide an update to extend the analysis to the present. Of the stations selected for the analysis only 5 stations with records dating from or before the mid 1960s were located in the Himalayan Region: Jiri (elevation-2003m), Okhaldunga (elevation-1720m), Chialsa (elevation-2770m), Chainpur (elevation-1329m), and Taplejung (elevation-1732m). Shrestha et al., 1999 define the Himalaya region in their figure 1 reproduced below.

Figure 1 from Shrestha et al., 1999

The location of the stations is shown in the following image from Google Earth, note they are all concentrated in the very eastern part of Nepal (click to enlarge), with none in the western Himalaya, none west of Long 86.23. The vast bulk of the Himalaya is empty of real data.

Location of weather stations in Nepal with records extending back to the early 1960s (based on Shrestha et al., 1999 Table 1). - click to enlarge

The temperature trends (Max/Min) for weather stations with records extending back to the early 1960s are shown in Figure 2 of the paper (reproduced below with a red H next to the 5 Himalayan stations-click to enlarge).

Figure 2 from Shrestha et al., 1999.

We extracted figures for the Himalayan stations and reproduce them in the chart below. It also shows the trend cited by the IPCC of 0.09º C.yr-1 in red.

Temperature trends for the Himalaya region from Shrestha et al., 1999. red line indicates IPCC trend for Himalaya quoted in Table 10.2 AR4 WGII report. UPDATED 8/7/10 3:30PM PST

It’s quite clear the trends of the actual data across the entire record do not support the figures produced in Shrestha’s Kriging analysis, which is limited to 1977-1994. The temperature trends for the Himalayan stations are as follows:

Station Max ºC.yr-1 Min ºC.yr-1
Jiri 0.063 -0.044
Okhaldunga 0.0016 0.0045
Chialsa 0.039 0.066
Chainpur 0.013 -0.0094
Taplejung -0.0057 0.0036
Average 0.022 0.0041

These trends, based on the reported station data, are much lower than the trends reported by Shrestha et al., 1999 and do not appear in any way unprecedented or alarming. The absence of data in the Western Himalaya invalidates the Kriging Analysis (you can’t interpolate into a data void), combine this with the crime of cherry picking recent trends to confuse weather with climate and a big part of the IPCC’s fragile tapestry of dangerous man made global warming suddenly falls through your fingers. All thanks to a loose thread revealed by the ABC.

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August 7, 2010 3:56 pm

Fast feedback climate sensitivity is around 0.75°C/W/m² – i.e. over a few decades, each additional W/m² of climate forcing will lead to around 0.75°C of global warming. Hence the current anthropogenic forcing should result in around 1.6 * 0.75 = 1.2°C of short-term warming.</i.
I'm not sure what you're driving at here. When co2 increases in the atmosphere the additional energy flux downward from it causes negative feedback from H2O resulting in cooling in the earth.

August 7, 2010 3:58 pm

The increased atmospheric CO2 from human activity should result in a top-of-atmosphere radiative imbalance (i.e. an enhanced greenhouse effect). This has been detected
I don’t know specifically what part of the atmosphere you mean. If you mean troposphere then the global warming that is supposed to be showing up there has never shown up.

August 7, 2010 4:01 pm

and by ground-based detection of increased downward longwave radiation (Wang 2009). Hence the Earth is warming up, as expected.
The earth is not warming. Please do not make things up. The earth has been cooling since 1998 while manmade co2 continues to rise.

August 7, 2010 4:04 pm

So, anthropogenic global warming is predicted by the straightforward physics of greenhouse gases and confirmed by experimental evidence from satellites and ground-based observations.
It isn’t confirmed. These discussion are the same every time. I knew it would be the same as other discussion like it. I’m not going to spend any more of my Saturday on this.

Mike
August 7, 2010 4:29 pm

“Our reconstruction point toward an unprecedented warming
trend in the 20th century but does not depict the usual trends
associated with “Medieval Warm Period” (MWP), or “Little
Ice Age” (LIA).”
Summer temperature trend over the past two millennia using air
content in Himalayan ice
Clim. Past, 3, 89–95, 2007
Hou, et al.
http://www.clim-past.net/3/89/2007/cp-3-89-2007.pdf

Icarus
August 7, 2010 4:30 pm

Amino Acids in Meteorites says:
August 7, 2010 at 3:52 pm
Human activity has increased atmospheric CO2 by ~100ppm since pre-industrial times.
This is not proof. It is conflation. The price of chocolate has also gone up in that time. Chocolate causes global warming.

I explained how we know that the extra 100ppm of CO2 is due to human activity. What do you think happens to the carbon in fossil fuels when they’re burnt? It combines with oxygen from the atmosphere to produce CO2. That’s what burning means. Where do you think that CO2 ends up? In the atmosphere, obviously. How do we know it’s still there (or at least part of it is)? Because of the changed isotopic composition of atmospheric CO2.

George Grisancich
August 7, 2010 4:38 pm

I’m surprised nobody has commented on the IPCC claim that temperatures in Sri Lanka are increasing by 2.0 deg PER YEAR.
See “0.016°C increase per year between 1961 to 90 over entire country, 2°C increase per year in central highlands”

Icarus
August 7, 2010 4:39 pm

Amino Acids in Meteorites says:
August 7, 2010 at 4:01 pm
and by ground-based detection of increased downward longwave radiation (Wang 2009). Hence the Earth is warming up, as expected.
The earth is not warming. Please do not make things up. The earth has been cooling since 1998 while manmade co2 continues to rise.

Why do you repeat things which you know are false? The Earth’s climate system is warming at about 0.18°C per decade, with no sign of that even slowing down, let alone stopping. The proof is undeniable.

August 7, 2010 4:45 pm

The chart showing Himalayan trends and IPCC’s trend from WGII Table 10.2 has now been corrected. This now shows the approximate IPCC trend – over 35 years (not 45) as previous shown.
Thanks Anthony for updating, and thanks to the keen eyes that picked up the error.
Perhaps the IPCC can send draft versions of its next assessment report to WUWT for review!

John M
August 7, 2010 5:06 pm

Icarus says:
August 7, 2010 at 4:39 pm

The Earth’s climate system is warming at about 0.18°C per decade, with no sign of that even slowing down

Really?
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2000/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2000/trend

Why do you repeat things which you know are false?

Indeed.
And wrt to that 0.18 degrees per decade—what caused the same rate of increase from ~1910 to ~1940?

August 7, 2010 5:17 pm

Icarus says:
“The proof is undeniable.”
Well, if you cherry-pick your parameters, then maybe.
But maybe not. Some alternate observations:
click1 [Note the divergence between rural & urban]
click2 [Another U.S. graph, rural/urban]
click3 [Raw global]
click4 [Global anomaly]
click5 [A Phil Jones chart]
click6 [Various world-wide temps, 4 seasonal graphs per location]
click7 [Antarctica, declining temp trend]
click8 [Satellite temps from 2003]
click9 [Another US declining temp graph]
click10 [EVERYBODY PANIC!!]
Yeah, temperatures have been rising. And falling.
It’s all happened before, with more extreme warmer and cooler periods than now.
The burden is on the climate alarmists to show that this is not natural warming. So far, they have been unable to falsify the null hypothesis. But not for lack of trying.

Icarus
August 7, 2010 5:31 pm

John M:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from:1989/to:1999/plot/rss/from:1989/to:1999/trend
Warming trend of 0.43°C per decade. Is that valid? Why or why not?

August 7, 2010 5:48 pm

George Grisancich, regarding the very high Sri Lankan temps of 2 degrees per year; the references cited by the IPCC in Table 10.2 are as follows:
Chandrapala, L., 1996: Long term trends of rainfall and temperature in Sri Lanka. Climate Variability and Agriculture, Y.P. Abrol, S. Gadgil and G.B. Pant, Eds., Narosa Publishing House, New Delhi, 153-162.
Chandrapala, L. and T.K. Fernando, 1995: Climate variability in Sri Lanka – a study of air temperature, rainfall and thunder activity. Proc. International Symposium on Climate and Life in the Asia-Pacific, University of Brunei, Darussalam.
Can anyone find a copy of either?

George Grisancich
August 7, 2010 7:11 pm

Working Group II Fourth Assessment draft chapters and reviews can be found

Fuzzylogic19
August 7, 2010 7:16 pm

J.Hansford says:
August 7, 2010 at 5:30 am
stephan says:
August 7, 2010 at 3:45 am
The ABC is funded by the Australian taxpayer, but only represents one side of Politics. The Labor Party’s side. The ABC needs to be disbanded. It is an obscenity in a modern democracy.
***
Absolute rubbish.

Fuzzylogic19
August 7, 2010 7:28 pm

If only glaciers could read, 90% are retreating. Like sitting in a car with a stuck acellerator and failing brakes, discussing the probable and not so probable reasons for the failure of both. In the meantime, the cliff keeps getting closer. The cliff is, in thjis case, is 2 billion people relying on summer glacier melt to feed the rivers. Weather that happens in 10-30-50 or 100 years is a moot point. Even half melted, the problems will be obvious. Call me alarmist if you feel the need.

Fuzzylogic19
August 7, 2010 7:32 pm

John from CA says:
August 7, 2010 at 10:40 am
I wouldn’t hold my breath for ABC News, this piece is as biased as it gets.
ABC News Video
Friday, August 6, 2010
Is Extreme Heat Evidence of Global Warming?
IS IT Global Warming?
http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/video/extreme-heat-evidence-global-warming-climate-change-hottest-summer-year-ever-11346254
Q: Has Global Warming finally arrived?
Richard Somerville (climate scientist) says “It has arrived…we’ve been predicting them [extreme weather patterns] for years and they are here”.
Deke Arndt from National Climate Data Center discusses the temperature trends (1880 to the present).
***
Bias? Since when is reporting what is happening bias? Okay, I get it, we’re getting more heatwaves and higher temperatures, but we musn’t link it to global warming. The world is cooling? Now isn’t that biassed?

John M
August 7, 2010 7:35 pm

Icarus says:
August 7, 2010 at 5:31 pm

Warming trend of 0.43°C per decade. Is that valid? Why or why not?

I thought your claim was “…no sign of that even slowing down”?
So why do you think that showing the earth was warming a lot faster more than 10 years ago than it has in the last decade somehow unscrews the pooch?
Of course when there seem to be 30 year cycles…
…which brings us back to that 1910-1940 time frame…

George Grisancich
August 7, 2010 7:40 pm

Fuzzylogic19,
Gerrard Henderson’s Media Watch Dog has been covering this theme since ABC Chairman Maurice Newman’s now infamous group-think speech earlier this year.
Balanced? No.

Fuzzylogic19
August 7, 2010 8:03 pm

Enneagram says:
August 7, 2010 at 9:49 am
Seriously, the question is: What is the average temperature 5,000 meters above sea level?
Then, how do you explain supposed “melting down”?
***
Seriously, have you ever seen a glacier? They don’t precariously balance on top of mountains, send me a picture of one that does. Glaciers form in mountain valleys at differen altitudes. With global warming the frost line retreats and the lowest altitude glaciers will melt first. Over the longer term, glaciers need to have a balance between melt and growth. In the short term that may mean moving between retreat and gain. The difference today is that 90% or more are retreating and continue to retreat. That puts it on a global scale. Glaciers are the single most important source of fresh water for humanity, we can’t fool around with it. How fast are they melting? That’s a consideration for future generations; that they are melting is beyond dispute.

Fuzzylogic19
August 7, 2010 8:08 pm

Ed Caryl says:
August 7, 2010 at 11:06 am
“Grey literature”
IPCC would use comic books if they found some that fit their agenda!
***
Is this supposed to be intelligent? Sorry, it’s humour of course, but I’m not laughing. I wonder why?

Alvin
August 7, 2010 9:00 pm

Read somewhere that the IPCC stat of 27% human based CO2 isotope was incorrect, that it is really only 4%.

Alvin
August 7, 2010 9:04 pm

Fuzzylogic19 says:
August 7, 2010 at 8:03 pm
Enneagram says:
August 7, 2010 at 9:49 am
Seriously, the question is: What is the average temperature 5,000 meters above sea level?
Then, how do you explain supposed “melting down”?
***
Seriously, have you ever seen a glacier? They don’t precariously balance on top of mountains, send me a picture of one that does. Glaciers form in mountain valleys at differen altitudes. With global warming the frost line retreats and the lowest altitude glaciers will melt first. Over the longer term, glaciers need to have a balance between melt and growth. In the short term that may mean moving between retreat and gain. The difference today is that 90% or more are retreating and continue to retreat. That puts it on a global scale. Glaciers are the single most important source of fresh water for humanity, we can’t fool around with it. How fast are they melting? That’s a consideration for future generations; that they are melting is beyond dispute.

Is that like “The debate is over”?