Hansen feels the need to explain why GISS is high in the midst of frigid air

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 - Global maps of temperature anomaly. See caption

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 - Line plots of European winter and summer seasonal temperature anomal, 1880-2010. See captionFigure 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.

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Rhoda R
December 12, 2010 12:06 pm

Mr. Vukcevic, is there a section on your web site that actually has some discussion about your graphs? I’m not really trying to be snarky because I have the impression that I’m missing a LOT of information from your graphs by not having some sort of insider knowledge. I’d like to know where to get that insider knowledge.

Paul Coppin
December 12, 2010 12:11 pm

” Smital says:
December 12, 2010 at 9:24 am
“UAH: 0.38 GISS: 0.74°C”
You know that they have a different reference period??”
——————-
You realize that makes both of them worth squat, right?

December 12, 2010 12:17 pm

Mr. Gates
Solar has an effect, but I think not the way most of scientist consider, but in the odd strong pulses of magnetic field known as magnetic storms, or as NASA would have it ‘magnetic ropes. They pump strong currents inducing magnetic field in the highly conducting magma (lithosphere in the Arctic is only some 25-30km thick), while induction can go as deep as 100km or more. These counter act the Earth’s field itself causing shift of the GMF strength from the Hudson Bay area towards Siberia where lithosphere is much thicker. This can be clearly seen by the change in the Hudson bay’s area magnetic field’s and its negative correlation to the SSN.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/LFC9.htm
Correlation weakens to totally disappear further away. Antarctica doesn’t have any of the above.
Stratosphere is highly ionised, the bifurcation of the Arctic’s GMF causes the spreading polar vortex to split in two halves, having profound effect on the Arctic climate / temperatures.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/NFC1.htm

Christopher Hanley
December 12, 2010 12:19 pm

Over the last 10 years, Had-CRUT and GISTEMP have diverged about 0.1 degree.
http://woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2001/offset:0.07/plot/gistemp/from:2001/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2001/trend/plot/gistemp/from:2001/trend/offset:-0.065
Warmists can still claim that their favorite series shows warming and that this year will be the warmest on record.

Paul Coppin
December 12, 2010 12:20 pm

” Matter says:
December 12, 2010 at 10:41 am
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.”
Nuts. Climatology is “the study of climate” There is only one “climatology” There are no other “climatologies”
“the mean temperatures during June in NW England from the period 1950-1980 would be a” “June mean temperature in NW England from the period 1950-1980” or for short, “June mean temperature.”
“Other ‘climatologies’ could be things like precipitation amounts.” Nope. That’d be “mean precipitation for the [insert period here] in NW England…”
Its no wonder most of the papers from “climatologists” make little sense, and even less science.

mike g
December 12, 2010 12:20 pm

The lack of intellectual honesty is stunning.

Jack Greer
December 12, 2010 12:21 pm

Bengt Abelsson said December 12, 2010 at 11:35 am:
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.
____________________
Is the temperature trend nearly flat since 1997? … since 1999? Your comment is best characterized as “cherry picking” and “lacking robustness” … much like a Lindzen/Choi study ….

Mycroft
December 12, 2010 12:26 pm

How many times have they come out with this comment…..
“as is expected if greenhouse gases continue to increase, such extremes will become common within a few decades.”……….STILL waiting for all the extremes to become
common,only one seems to be raising its head in the last 3 winters in the UK, any one guess which one?

Ken Hall
December 12, 2010 12:27 pm

“““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”
I know, I was just making a stab at humour at Hansen’s expense.

mike g
December 12, 2010 12:29 pm

R. Gates
The record highs in Arctic regions are only occurring where there is no instrumentation. Everywhere there is instrumentation, the temperatures are pretty much normal (see DMI).
This is a case of scientific fraud by NASA, imho.

Ken Hall
December 12, 2010 12:29 pm

The day we take Hansen seriously, will be the day we give humanity a death sentence.
BTW, have any of Hansen’s predictions come to pass? Is half of Manhattan under sea water yet?

December 12, 2010 12:30 pm

Rhoda R says:
December 12, 2010 at 12:06 pm
Mr. Vukcevic, is there a section on your web site that actually has some discussion about your graphs? ……. I’d like to know where to get that insider knowledge.
Sorry to disappoint you. Only ‘insider knowledge’ is somewhere on my hard drive, even I often loose track of what I’ve done. Unless I have nearly finished with an idea, I don’t write much, there lays the danger, if I write something today, in few weeks time I might contradict myself.
Data I use are foundations of my graph-ing, my interpretations are of secondary importance and often inaccurate. Bit of a hobby.

Theo Goodwin
December 12, 2010 12:30 pm

R. Gates says:
December 12, 2010 at 10:32 am
“In short, claiming “natural variability” as a cause in no explanation at all as science is all about finding the reasons behind that variability.”
I think the phrase “natural variability” does not mean what you think it means. No one has ever cited natural variability as the cause of something. When people cite natural variability with regard to some phenomenon, their point is that the cause is unknown. They are saying that their best guess about the cause is no better than the guess of natural variability.

Bengt Abelsson
December 12, 2010 12:45 pm

Jack Greer:
My point is: Hansen says it´s not flat. His figure 11 says different.
Maybe his “flat” is not my “flat”. Have you seen it yourself?

Robinson
December 12, 2010 12:47 pm

As Warren Buffet said, “it’s only when the tide goes out that you get to see who’s been swimming naked”. In this case it’s only when the temperatures are actually falling that you get to see who’s been fiddling the figures :p.

Jack Greer
December 12, 2010 12:54 pm

REPLY: Hansen is using an outdated base period. 1951-1980 to calculate anomaly, whereas other metric are using more recent periods. – Anthony”
________
What constitutes an “outdated” base period, Anthony? What’s your definition? Don’t you think the Satellite measurement base periods might be different for reasons other than outdatedness?
REPLY: There’s a WMO standard for normals and their periods. Used by NOAA for years, of using the last 30 years as a base period, rather than one 30 years ago, and updating every ten years.
From NOAA’s FAQ’s http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/faqs/climfaq23.html

Normals are best used as a base against which climate during the following decade can be measured. Comparison of normals from one 30-year period to normals from another 30-year period may lead to erroneous conclusions about climatic change. This is due to changes over the decades in station location, in the instrumentation used, in how weather observations were made, and in how the various normals were computed. The differences between normals due to these non-climatic changes may be larger than the differences due to a true change in climate.

and

Normals cover a 30–year period of record, and are updated through the end of each decade ending in zero (e.g., 1951-1980, 1961-1990, etc.). Normals are generally computed shortly after all data for the period has been received by NCDC and quality control processing has completed.

So in essence, using 1951 to 1980 GISS is thirty years behind the “climate normal” times. If I wrote a peer review paper today and used old base periods it would get tossed on that basis alone. But hey, if you are the GISS king of climate science, any old base period goes for your work. – Anthony

December 12, 2010 12:54 pm

Is all this “Hottest” year business just for bragging rights (rites?) or does it actually mean something?

rAr
December 12, 2010 1:02 pm

Take a look at the ENSO reference page, Reference for El Niño and La Niña weather pattern effects, and see if this paragraph still makes sense.
“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.
It’s not like Hansen isn’t aware of the ENSO state.
“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.”
Perhaps an explanation regarding warmer temperature anomalies caused strong easterly equatorial winds is in order.
I wonder if the land reporting stations in the Hudson and Baffin heat source area are reporting greater than average precipitation anomalies?

December 12, 2010 1:11 pm

R. Gates
“In short, claiming “natural variability” as a cause in no explanation at all as science is all about finding the reasons behind that variability.”
Thanks. This seems to be a particularly hard point for some to get.

Cris Streetzel
December 12, 2010 1:11 pm

“Sea ice insulates the atmosphere from ocean water warmth, allowing surface air to achieve temperatures much lower than that of the ocean.”
They seem to playing this as another way that ice loss is a positive feedback (along with the change in albedo). However, it occurs to me that the positive feedback would the short-term. If the ice insulates the ocean, it allows it to maintain a higher temperature. Reducing ice cover results in heat flow to the air, just as GISS points out. However, the long-term result is a loss of energy from the ocean into the air and subsequently, into space (the poles being a great place to radiate heat away from the Earth).
So in the long-run, the radiative effect of the loss of sea ice should cause ocean temps decline – a negative feedback. Put another way, ice loss is a positive feedback on air temp, but a negative feedback for ocean temp which has a greater effect on the climate system.

Jimbo
December 12, 2010 1:23 pm

R. Gates says:
December 12, 2010 at 11:31 am
………………………..
vukcevic says:
December 12, 2010 at 11:08 am
Mr. R Gates
…………………………
Pacific Ocean opens the Gates to the mysterious PDO .
————————
[R. Gates]
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

You could’a fooled me! 75% sure yet you lost your “primary impetus.”

Bill Marsh
December 12, 2010 1:24 pm

I think he’s feeling the need to explain because the GISS temps are becoming obviously out of sync with reality (and the satellite measurements and HAdley, and …) , even to the most casual observer. His blatant manipulation of the thermometer record is becoming obvious.

Frank K.
December 12, 2010 1:29 pm

Ken Roberts says:
December 12, 2010 at 12:54 pm
“Is all this “Hottest” year business just for bragging rights (rites?) or does it actually mean something?”
Ken – this is all about getting publicity so as to assure increases in their bloated, taxpayer-funded research budgets (at the expense of us, the taxpayers). It has little to do with science…

December 12, 2010 1:33 pm

Hansen writes, “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.”
Maybe if they included the Sea Surface Temperature data for the Hudson Bay and Baffin Bay their analysis wouldn’t be so high. For those who are not aware, GISS deletes SST data in areas where there is seasonal ice, so that they can extend the (warmer) land surface data out over the oceans. Refer to:
http://bobtisdale.blogspot.com/2010/05/giss-deletes-arctic-and-southern-ocean.html
Also, any additional sea ice melt this year would be attributable to the fact that the year started with an El Nino.

December 12, 2010 1:40 pm

If Dr. James “Thumbs On The Temperature Scale” Hansen keeps weaving only select data sets together, revising historical records that show cooling (eg: Orland CA) , and “homogenizing” the result, I am sure he can convert any yearly temperature decrease into an increase. This man’s ingenuity at distortion is without bound. I hope Darrell Issa’s first witness at Congressional hearings into this global warming baloney will be Dr. Hansen. Hansen has a lot of explaining to do.