I was working on a general report yesterday, but in checking background for it, I discovered this recent missive from Dr. Hansen. I suppose when your agency is the “odd man out”, you feel a need to explain yourself. Note the difference in November 2010 global temperature anomaly metrics:
UAH: 0.38 GISS: 0.74°C
Yes, I’d try to explain that too. I’ll have another post on this, but for now, here’s GISS report verbatim as it appears here. – Anthony
GISS Surface Temperature Analysis
2010 — Global Temperature and Europe’s Frigid Air
By James Hansen, Reto Ruedy, Makiko Sato and Ken Lo
Figure 1:
(a) January-November surface air temperature anomaly in GISS analysis, (b) November 2010 anomaly using only data from meteorological stations and Antarctic research stations, with the radius of influence of a station limited to 250 km to better reveal maximum anomalies. (View large PDF)Figure 1(a) shows January-November 2010 surface temperature anomalies (relative to 1951-80) in the preliminary Goddard Institute for Space Studies analysis. This is the warmest January-November in the GISS analysis, which covers 131 years. However, it is only a few hundredths of a degree warmer than 2005, so it is possible that the final GISS results for the full year will find 2010 and 2005 to have the same temperature within the margin of error.
As described in an in-press paper at Reviews of Geophysics (see summary PDF) that defines the GISS analysis method, we estimate a two-standard-deviation uncertainty (95 percent confidence interval) of 0.05°C for comparison of global temperatures in nearby recent years. The magnitude of this uncertainty and the small temperature differences among different years is one reason that alternative analyses yield different rankings for the warmest years. However, results for overall global temperature change of the past century are in good agreement among the alternative analyses (by NASA/GISS, NOAA National Climate Data Center, and the joint analysis of the UK Met Office Hadley Centre and the University of East Anglia Climatic Research Unit).
Figure 1(b) shows November 2010 surface temperature anomalies based only on surface air measurements at meteorological stations and Antarctic research stations. In producing this map the radius of influence of a given station is limited to 250 km to allow extreme temperature anomalies to be apparent. Northern Europe had negative anomalies of more than 4°C, while the Hudson Bay region of Canada had monthly mean anomalies greater than +10°C.
The extreme warmth in Northeast Canada is undoubtedly related to the fact that Hudson Bay was practically ice free. In the past, including the GISS base period 1951-1980, Hudson Bay was largely ice-covered in November. The contrast of temperatures at coastal stations in years with and without sea ice cover on the neighboring water body is useful for illustrating the dramatic effect of sea ice on surface air temperature. Sea ice insulates the atmosphere from ocean water warmth, allowing surface air to achieve temperatures much lower than that of the ocean. It is for this reason that some of the largest positive temperature anomalies on the planet occur in the Arctic Ocean as sea ice area has decreased in recent years.
The cold anomaly in Northern Europe in November has continued and strengthened in the first half of December. Combined with the unusual cold winter of 2009-2010 in Northern Hemisphere mid-latitudes, this regional cold spell has caused widespread commentary that global warming has ended. That is hardly the case. On the contrary, globally November 2010 is the warmest November in the GISS record.
Figure 2(a) illustrates that there is a good chance that 2010 as a whole will be the warmest year in the GISS analysis. Even if the December global temperature anomaly is unusually cool, 2010 will at least be in a statistical tie with 2005 for the warmest year.
Figure 2: Global surface air temperature anomalies relative to 1951-1980 mean for (a) annual and 5-year running means, and (b) 60-month and 132-month running means. In (a) the 2010 point is a preliminary 11-month anomaly. Green vertical bars are two-standard-deviation error estimates, as discussed in our Reviews of Geophysics paper. (View large PDF)
Figure 2(b) shows the 60-month (5-year) and 132-month (11-year) running-mean surface air temperature in the GISS analysis. Contrary to frequent assertions that global warming slowed in the past decade, as discussed in our paper in press, global warming has proceeded in the current decade just as fast as in the prior two decades. The warmth of 2010 is especially noteworthy, given the strong La Nina that developed in the second half of 2010. The La Nina, caused by unusually strong easterly equatorial winds, produces the cool anomalies in the tropical Pacific Ocean as cold upwelling deep water along the Peruvian coast is blown westward along the equator.
Figure 3: Temperature anomalies relative to 1951-1980 for the European region defined by 36°N-70°N and 10°W-30°E. (View large PDF)
Back to the cold air in Europe: is it possible that reduced Arctic sea ice is affecting weather patterns? Because Hudson Bay (and Baffin Bay, west of Greenland) are at significantly lower latitudes than most of the Arctic Ocean, global warming may cause them to remain ice free into early winter after the Arctic Ocean has become frozen insulating the atmosphere from the ocean. The fixed location of the Hudson-Baffin heat source could plausibly affect weather patterns, in a deterministic way — Europe being half a Rossby wavelength downstream, thus producing a cold European anomaly in the trans-Atlantic seesaw. Several ideas about possible effects of the loss of Arctic sea ice on weather patterns are discussed in papers referenced by Overland, Wang and Walsh.
However, we note in our Reviews of Geophysics paper in press that the few years just prior to 2009-2010, with low Arctic sea ice, did not produce cold winters in Europe. The cold winter of 2009-2010 was associated with the most extreme Arctic Oscillation in the period of record. Figure 3, from our paper in press, shows that 7 of the last 10 European winters were warmer than the 1951-1980 average winter, and 10 of the past 10 summers were warmer than climatology. The average warming of European winters is at least as large as the average warming of summers, but it is less noticeable because of the much greater variability in winter.
Finally, we point out in Figure 3 the anomalous summer warmth in 2003 and 2010, summers that were associated with extreme events centered in France and Moscow. If the warming trend that is obvious in that figure continues, as is expected if greenhouse gases continue to increase, such extremes will become common within a few decades.
A copy of this webpage text is also available as a PDF document.
Reference
Hansen, J., R. Ruedy, Mki. Sato, and K. Lo, 2010: Global surface temperature change. Rev. Geophys., in press, doi:10.1029/2010RG000345.
Contacts
Please address media inquiries regarding the GISS surface temperature analysis to Ms. Leslie McCarthy by e-mail at Leslie.M.McCarthy@nasa.gov or by phone at 212-678-5507.
Scientific inquiries about the analysis may be directed to Dr. James E. Hansen.

from hansons article..
Could somebody point me to details of instruments used to measure surface Ts to xx hundreths of a degree accuracy.
Or is someone going to tell me that this is an artifact of statistics?
It is not about different normal period. GISTEMP went AWOL.
http://stevengoddard.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/2010temperatureanomalies.png
Global SST, responsible for 70% of the global record, cooled since April by 0.2 deg C
http://i54.tinypic.com/2j0e6p4.jpg
To make up this drop, surface station record would have to jump up by 0.7 deg C or something.
Eric, read on. Hansen refutes the idea of warm causing cold. His only nod towards extreme being climate warming related, is heat extremes. He dismisses cold extremes in his next paragraph with “However…”
The following is a joke I found on the web and a bit offtopic but I think it describes Dr. Hansen’s work quite a bit actually:
Scientific Phrases – What They Say and What They Mean
“It has long been known” – I didn’t look up the original reference.
“A definite trend is evident” – These data are practically meaningless.
“While it has not been possible to provide definite answers to the questions” – An unsuccessful experiment but I still hope to get it published.
“Three of the samples were chosen for detailed study” – The other results didn’t make any sense.
“Typical results are shown” – 1 This is the prettiest graph. 2 The best results are shown.
“These results will be in a subsequent report” – I might get around to this sometime, if pushed/funded.
“In my experience” – Once.
“In case after case” – Twice.
“In a series of cases” – Thrice.
“It is believed that” – I think.
“It is generally believed that” – A couple of others think so, too.
“Correct within an order of magnitude” – Wrong.
“According to statistical analysis” – Rumor has it.
“A statistically-oriented projection of the significance of these findings” – A wild guess.
“A careful analysis of obtainable data” – Three pages of notes were obliterated when I knocked over a glass iced tea.
“It is clear that much additional work will be required before a complete understanding of this phenomenon occurs” – 1 I don’t understand it. 2 I need more grant money. 3 I can get at least one more paper out of this.
“After additional study by my colleagues” – They dont understand it either.
“Thanks are due to Joe Blotz for assistance with the experiment and to Cindy Adams for valuable discussions” – Mr. Blotz did the work and Ms. Adams explained to me what it meant.
“A highly significant area for exploratory study” – A totally useless topic selected by my committee.
“Handled with extreme care during the experiments” – Not dropped on the floor.
“Presumably at longer times” – I didn’t take the time to find out.
“This paper will omit a review of the more recent literature in favor of” – I don’t know if anything has been written on this since my dissertation.
“Various authorities agree” – I overheard this in the hall.
“It was observed that” – One of my students noticed that “No discussion would be complete without reference to the contributions of” – I need another footnote on this page.
“This research has left many questions unanswered.” – I didnt find anything of significance.
“This finding has not yet been incorporated into general theory” – Perhaps my next graduate student will make sense of it.
“It is hoped that this study will stimulate further investigation in this field” – I quit.
/Carl
Smital says: December 12, 2010 at 9:24 am (and Harold too)
“UAH: 0.38 GISS: 0.74°C” <== Basis of much of Anthony's comment …
You know that they have a different reference period??
==============
Nice post, Anthony. {rolling eyes smilie}
OK looking back the graph, correction on what I said. Actually it is a .08 celsius rise over the 130 year period. .06 celsius rise from “normal”.
But the first portion of the period was from .02 below “normal”.
Whatever “normal” is. So a .06 rise from “normal”.
Big deal!
Even so, NASA GI*Z and its talking head leader is a complete embarrassment to science, and to the USA.
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
Pamela Gray says:
December 12, 2010 at 10:04 am
” The elephant is our own highly variable planet.”
____
Pamela, saying something is “highly variable” does not affix a causation. Yes, both weather and climate are highly variable, but the scientific thing to do is to describe the long-term, medium-term, and short-term causes of those variations. On the long-term side we have the carbon cycle of rock weathering, lasting over millions of years, and spanning across ice ages. Also on the long-term we have the position of our solar system in the galaxy, especially with respect to the galactic plane and regions of dust. On the medium-term, spanning hundreds of thousands of years we have the Milankovtich cycles. On the shorter-term side we have the solar cycles and ocean cycles such as ENSO, PDO, etc. The most interesting thing with the current CO2 levels, is that this is normally a medium-term climate variable, and yet because of human activity, has spiked up 40% in a very short-term (geologically speaking) period.
In short, claiming “natural variability” as a cause in no explanation at all as science is all about finding the reasons behind that variability.
Still no temp in Bolivia. Or anywhere in sub saharan Africa. Classy science really. Someone hand out the Nobels.
Wrong R. Gates. Bone up on reading comprehension. You put words in Hansen’s mouth to say that the Arctic Oscillation is related to AGW. The cold is weather related, the heat is global warming related according to an accurate reading of Hansen’s missives.
R. Gates says:
December 12, 2010 at 10:15 am
Yes, this absolutely does not prove that the 40% increase in CO2 over the past few hundred years is to blame, but it does fit in with the general AGW hypothesis, and certainly does not dispprove it.
==================================
HUH???
Keep throwing out that chum in the form of posts, R. The sharks are circling already.
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
0.05°C error margin?
Yeah right – especially when other global records using almost the same data can be soo different!
P Walker:
“What does “warmer than climatology” mean ?”
Climatology is the average values for a given area over a chosen base period. E.g. the mean temperatures during June in NW England from the period 1950-1980 would be a ‘climatology’. Let’s say the average temperature is 12.5 C. If you recorded 13.5 C as the average for this month, this month would be ‘warmer than climatology’. Other ‘climatologies’ could be things like precipitation amounts.
P Walker says:
December 12, 2010 at 10:15 am
“What does “warmer than climatology” mean ?”
Warmer than the long term (climatological) average at that place.
Very conveniently for Hansen, that large grey area of lacking stations in Africa was colder than normal – at least according to RSS: http://www.remss.com/data/msu/graphics/tlt/medium/global/ch_tlt_2010_11_anom_v03_2.png
Pamela, his However paragraph seems to 1) refute the previous paragraph like you said, 2) say that Europe is actually warm and these two winters don’t count and 3) blames AO without further explanation.
Like you said his message is “highly anomalous stuff is man’s fault” however “highly anomalous cold might have a natural explanation” however “highly anomalous warmth is going to increase” [because of a 0.6 degree warming from CO2] My guess is if the cold gets really really bad he will “however” it to be man’s fault after all.
Pamela Gray says:
December 12, 2010 at 10:04 am
” The elephant is our own highly variable planet.”
Yes Pamela, but how does internal variability change the size extent and intensity of the polar vortex over periods such as those from the MWP to LIA to date so as to approximately match the ebb and flow of solar variability ?
I’ve given a lot of weight to internal system variability but cannot make it match observations without a solar input.
Mr. R Gates
Hansen may have his hypothesis, he may believe in it, or even have some doubts and casting an eye for a rope to climb out of the hole he dug himself into, hopefully not irretrievably. You appear to be an erudite man, such are not followers especially not of the lost causes, they are often leaders of men. Wise man will look for the first opportunity to get of the ghoul train before it hits the buffers. Have you considered that there is not much time left?
In mean time here something you should familiarise yourself with, it just might be another small nail in the coffin being readied for the ailing AGW.
Pacific Ocean opens the Gates to the mysterious PDO .
Mr. Wild
Arctic vortex size and angular velocity continuously change, that is not particularly significant. What maters is when the vortex is ripped apart, parts flying off out of the Arctic circle.
In a war over 1/100ths of a degree 0.36 stands out worse than two sore thumbs.
I understand what he meant . I meant that it sounds peculiar – why not just say the average ? The whole paper sounded a bit off , by the way . As others have noted , Africa is not included in the anomolies . Didn’t anyone notice that the fans appeared to be freezing their tails off during the World Cup ?
vukcevic says:
December 12, 2010 at 11:08 am
Mr. R Gates
Hansen may have his hypothesis, he may believe in it, or even have some doubts and casting an eye for a rope to climb out of the hole he dug himself into, hopefully not irretrievably. You appear to be an erudite man, such are not followers especially not of the lost causes, they are often leaders of men. Wise man will look for the first opportunity to get of the ghoul train before it hits the buffers. Have you considered that there is not much time left?
In mean time here something you should familiarise yourself with, it just might be another small nail in the coffin being readied for the ailing AGW.
Pacific Ocean opens the Gates to the mysterious PDO .
_______
Thanks for the link to your pages. Indeed, the PDO is one of my main areas of focus right now, and along with other ocean cycles and sunspot magetic field strength, is the primary impetus to my skepticism of the full AGW hypothesis.
The problem is most if not all IPCC computer models are wrong. It’s because they use incorrect physics to predict cloud albedo. It came from Van de Hulst and entered the climate models via Lacis and Hansen from Sagan’s ‘two-stream approximation’.
They all assume constant ‘Mie asymmetry factor’, ‘g’. But in 1908 when Gustav Mie published solutions of Maxwell’s equations for the interaction of light with a dielectric sphere, he assumed a boundary condition of a plane wave, not the case in a sol.
And the real explanation? A cloud just about to rain is darker because direct backscattering at the upper surface allows less light to enter. Reduce droplet size by pollution and there’s less shielding. Diffuse scattering is symmetrical so, assuming no absorption half the extra energy exits the cloud base, a powerful form of AGW.
That’s a game changer because the first thing you do is reduce the IPCC’s predictions of high feedback CO2-AGW by at least a factor of three to the no amplification case. Depending on the ‘cloud AGW’, net Co2-AGW could end up as zero.
This is the biggest scientific mistake in history and following the failure of experiment to prove ‘cloud albedo effect’ cooling, NASA has claimed fake ‘reflection’ physics to explain the effect. I’m beginning to suspect a scam, at least since 2004.
The paper is interesting. However, I find the next last sentence, refuting the claim that the temperature trend since 1998 is nearly flat, is not corresponding to his figure 11.
It may be so that mr Hansen et al have a different meaning of the word flat.
You may look for yourselves.
You combine the questionable practice of averaging an intensive variable like temperature with the fact that he has extrapolated the readings beyond the limits of his data and you end up with… complete gibberish.
““UAH: 0.38 GISS: 0.74°C”
You know that they have a different reference period??”
You mean Hansen is including July figures with Novembers? Like when he used September’s for October in 2007?
I would not be surprised.
REPLY: Hansen is using an outdated base period. 1951-1980 to calculate anomaly, whereas other metric are using more recent periods. – Anthony