Guest Post by Ira Glickstein
According to the latest from NASA GISS (Goddard Institute for Space Studies), 2010 is shaping up to be “the warmest of 131 years”, based on global data from January through November. They compare it to 2005 “2nd warmest of 131 years” and 1998 “5th warmest of 131 years”.
We won’t know until the December data is in. Even then, given the level of noise in the base data and the wiggle room in the analysis, each of which is about the same magnitude as the Global Warming they are trying to quantify, we may not know for several years. If ever. GISS seems to analyze the data for decades, if necessary, to get the right answer.
A case in point is the still ongoing race between 1934 and 1998 to be the hottest for US annual mean temperature, the subject of one of the emails released in January of this year by NASA GISS in response to a FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) request. The 2007 message from Dr. Makiko Sato to Dr. James Hansen traces the fascinating story of that hot competition. See the January WUWT and my contemporary graphic that was picked up by several websites at that time.
[My new graphic, shown here, reproduces Sato’s email text, including all seven data sets, some or all of which were posted to her website. Click image for a larger version.]
The Great Hot 1934 vs 1998 Race
1) Sato’s first report, dated July 1999, shows 1934 with an impressive lead of over half a degree (0.541ºC to be exact) above 1998.
Keep in mind that this is US-only data, gathered and analyzed by Americans. Therefore, there is no possibility of fudging by the CRU (Climategate Research Unit) at East Anglia, England, or bogus data from Russia, China, or some third-world country. (If there is any error, it was due to home-grown error-ists :^)
Also note that total Global Warming, over the past 131 years, has been, according to the IPCC, GISS and CRU, in the range of 0.7ºC to 0.8ºC. So, if 1934 was more than 0.5ºC warmer than 1998, that is quite a significant percentage of the total.
At the time of this analysis, July 1999, the 1998 data had been in hand for more than half a year. Nearly all of it was from the same reporting stations as previous years, so any adjustments for relocated stations or those impacted by nearby development would be minor. The 1934 data had been in hand for, well, 65 years (eligible to collect Social Security :^) so it had, presumably, been fully analyzed.
Based on this July 1999 analysis, if I was a betting man, I would have put my money on 1934 as a sure thing. However, that was not to be, as Sato’s email recounts.
Why? Well, given steadily rising CO2 levels, and the high warming sensitivity of virtually all climate models to CO2, it would have been, let us say inconvenient, for 1998 to have been bested by a hot golden oldie from over 60 years previous! Kind of like your great grandpa beating you in a foot race.
2) The year 2000 was a bad one for 1934. November 2000 analysis seems to have put it on a downhill ski slope that cooled it by nearly a fifth of a degree (-0.186ºC to be precise). On the other hand, it was a very good year for 1998, which, seemingly put on a ski lift, managed to warm up by nearly a quarter of a degree (+0.233ºC). That confirms the Theory of Conservation of Mass and Energy. In other words, if someone in your neighborhood goes on a diet and loses weight, someone else is bound to gain it.
OK, now the hot race is getting interesting, with 1998 only about an eighth of a degree (0.122ºC) behind 1934. I’m still rooting for 1934. How about you?
3) Further analysis in January 2001 confirmed the downward trend for 1934 (lost an additional 26th of a degree) and the upward movement of 1998 (gained an additional 21th of a degree), tightening the hot race to a 28th of a degree (0.036ºC).
Good news! 1934 is still in the lead, but not by much!
4) Sato’s analysis and reporting on the great 1934 vs 1998 race seems to have taken a hiatus between 2001 and 2006. When the cat’s away, the mice will play, and 1998 did exactly that. The January 2006 analysis has 1998 unexpectedly tumbling, losing over a quarter of a degree (-0.269ºC), and restoring 1934‘s lead to nearly a third of a degree (0.305ºC). Sato notes in her email “This is questionable, I may have kept some data which I was checking.” Absolutely, let us question the data! Question, question, question … until we get the right answer.
5) Time for another ski lift! January 2007 analysis boosts 1998 by nearly a third of a degree (+0.312ºC) and drops 1934 a tiny bit (-0.008ºC), putting 1998 in the lead by a bit (0.015ºC). Sato comments “This is only time we had 1998 warmer than 1934, but one [on?] web for 7 months.”
6) and 7) March and August 2007 analysis shows tiny adjustments. However, in what seems to be a photo finish, 1934 sneaks ahead of 1998, being warmer by a tiny amount (0.023ºC). So, hooray! 1934 wins and 1998 is second.
OOPS, the hot race continued after the FOIA email! I checked the tabular data at GISS Contiguous 48 U.S. Surface Air Temperature Anomaly (C) today and, guess what? Since the Sato FOIA email discussed above, GISS has continued their taxpayer-funded work on both 1998 and 1934. The Annual Mean for 1998 has increased to 1.32ºC, a gain of a bit over an 11th of a degree (+0.094ºC), while poor old 1934 has been beaten down to 1.2ºC., a loss of about a 20th of a degree (-0.049ºC). So, sad to say, 1934 has lost the hot race by about an eighth of a degree (0.12ºC). Tough loss for the old-timer.
Analysis of the Analysis
What does this all mean? Is this evidence of wrongdoing? Incompetence? Not necessarily. During my long career as a system engineer I dealt with several brilliant analysts, all absolutely honest and far more competent than me in statistical processes. Yet, they sometimes produced troubling estimates, often due to poor assumptions.
In one case, prior to the availability of GPS, I needed a performance estimate for a Doppler-Inertial navigation system. They computed a number about 20% to 30% worse than I expected. In those days, I was a bit of a hot head, so I stormed over and shouted at them. A day later I had a revised estimate, 20% to 30% better than I had expected. My conclusion? It was my fault entirely. I had shouted too loudly! So, I went back and sweetly asked them to try again. This time they came in near my expectations and that was the value we promised to our customer.
Why had they been off? Well, as you may know, an inertial system is very stable, but it drifts back and forth on an 84 minute cycle (the period of a pendulum the length of the radius of the Earth). A Doppler radar does not drift, but it is noisy and may give erroneous results over smooth surfaces such as water and grass. The analysts had designed a Kalman filter that modeled the error characteristics to achieve a net result that was considerably better than either the inertial or the Doppler alone. To estimate performance they needed to assume the operating conditions, including how well the inertial system had been initialized prior to take off, and the terrain conditions for the Doppler. Change assumptions, change the results.
Conclusions
Is 2010 going to be declared warmest global annual by GISS after the December data comes in? I would not bet against that. As we have seen, they keep questioning and analyzing the data until they get the right answers. But, whatever they declare, should we believe it? What do you think?
Figuring out the warmest US annual is a lot simpler. Although I (and probably you) think 1934 was warmer than 1998, it seems someone at GISS, who knows how to shout loudly, does not think so. These things happen and, as I revealed above, I myself have been guilty of shouting at analysts. But, I corrected my error, and I was not asking all the governments of the world to wreck their economies on the basis of the results.
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Another good thing about HadCrut: With their temperatures they also show the percentage of the globe, on which these temperatures are based. It starts in the twenties (in 1850), and currently is in the low eighties. They do not cheat with non-existing data from the arctic.
The corrupt bureaucracies of UN and EU want ro raise taxes of their own, and what better to do that than saving the planet. Thus they need some corrupt agency to deliver them the necessary corrupt data. Guess who?
@ur momisugly Onion,
Yet you support a man and his work product who stated under oath in a court of law that breaking the law for the common good (his version of it, by the way) is justified.
Yeh right, you’re “squeaky clean”… and I’m an astronaut.
“Dave F says:
December 25, 2010 at 11:22 pm
I just think the global data of that time has no credibility. The technology level between now and then is staggering.”
And what about earlier data say 1200 or 1640. If you are right then no one can make any reasonable comparison between earlier data and now.
Sceptic of the year or what?
While the “warmist deniers” are dissing the measurements taken in the 1800’s and early 20th century, they would do well to remember that Science was taken very seriously by the “amateurs” as well as the “professionals”. The quotes are because, at that time, there were very few people employed solely in a single profession. Per force, the people did “real work,” in addition to taking measurements of the weather. The classic example would be the Army Surgeons taking the weather measurements.
Gaining knowledge for mankind was taken very seriously, and most observers tried their best to avoid errors. Today, the measurements by NOAA and NASA aren’t taken nearly as seriously, viz the documented problems with reference stations. To say that only professionals can capture valid data is more than a little suspect. Given the statements by Hansen (see above), and the machinations of CRU, the New Zealand MO, GISS, and other “professionals,” it would seem to be clear that reestablishing the honor of careful amateurs in scientific investigations would be of paramount interest. Only amateurs have no vested interest in funding, or tenure, or political correctness. I’m throwing the last in, assuming – always dangerous – that those of political mien will be in the minority in amateur scientific investigations, and easily exposed when data is falsified.
Anthony is one of the pioneers in this area, by letting serious amateurs and true scientific professionals have a podium. The absolute proof that it works is the presence of the non-scientific Trolls who wander the halls looking for “believers.” When real science is being done, there are no believers, only thoughtful analytics. I’m not using the term sceptic, as it refers to a general negativism in the dictionary. I don’t think the majority here are “Sceptics,” I think we are sceptical of certain undocumented, unprovable claims from the “Climatologists.”
Climatologist: n., A branch of pseudo-science concerned with propagating the idea that, despite physical measurements, and historical, and geological refutation, there is something magical about computer programs which are unable to repeatedly match past data with future prognostications despite forcibly modifying historical data to create a temporary match. See also Phrenologists, Magnetology, Palm Readers, Tarot Cards, Uri Geller.
Statistically speaking, 2010 will not be significantly different from 1998, although the numbers will be a bit lower. Also the warmest month will still be in 1998.
But according to IPCC we should have had a warming of 0.4°F or more. We did not. That probably IS significant.
(PS A look at ch 5 indicates that UAH should have an anomaly of less that 0.4 in December; thus there will be no new record)
Stockholm Sweden hasn’t have so clold December since 1788–1789 but who cares after adjustments it will be warmest sicne 131 years 😉
Onion says:
December 25, 2010 at 4:54 pm
“So this race between 1934 and 1998 was in the US temperature record, that comprises 2% of the Earth’s surface.”
The point being that the US temperature should be substantially better then the temperature record for the Arctic, Antarctic, Africa, the Oceans and a whole host of other places.
If we have a potential half degree error in the US temperature record with relatively good data, what is the error in the 75% of the world where the data quality is at best is poor?
son of mulder says:
December 26, 2010 at 7:53 am
And what about earlier data say 1200 or 1640. If you are right then no one can make any reasonable comparison between earlier data and now.
Show me what they were using to measure temperatures. Trees?
It is quite possible that 2010 is the warmest year on record even as Europe and Britain are buried under snow. Perhaps a warmer Pacific Ocean is responsible. Problem is, the Pacific Ocean doesn’t have any money.
Booker, The Telegraph, blasts the MET again, and it’s a good one…..
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/8223165/The-green-hijack-of-the-Met-Office-is-crippling-Britain.html
“”The answer is that in the past 20 years, as can be seen from its website, the Met Office has been hijacked from its proper role to become wholly subservient to its obsession with global warming. (At one time it even changed its name to the Met Office “for Weather and Climate Change”.) “”
Seems much like the 2000 Presidential election. Recount, recount, recount until we get the results we want. Readjusting 1934 numbers is somewhat akin to adding precincts in 2070 for an election 60 years earlier. It is the need to believe.
Folks , Nova Scotia is in the Northern hemisphere and December has been especially warm. There may be snow tonight ,but wet snow from warm water. In fact Eastern Canada has had a mild December. In Nunavit, there is little sea ice.
The area just described , although only a tiny percentage of the earth’s surface is bigger than the US area. The huge snowfall that shutdown Heathrow was actually 3 inches. Airport crews worldwide are still laughing at that one. A touch of frost in Yorkshire does not mean all of Europe is iced under.
Time to remove head and realise that there is more to the world than California and Texas.
Re Baa Humbug
December 26, 2010 at 6:23 am:
“No need for an independent temperature analysis onion. As I stated in my post #12:29am GISS themselves have “redone” the analysis 7 times. They were wrong 6 times (according to them) so what makes you think they are right this time? How many times does GISS need to say “we were wrong” before we stop believing they are right this time?”
The analysis is pretty much the same across all versions globally. Only by zooming in on specific regions do we see a lot of change between the versions. Even then the differences in the various versions can be regarded as proportional to the uncertainty. I wouldn’t say 1998 is clearly warmer than 1934 in the US GISTEMP record, they are probably statistically the same.
Re sleeper
December 26, 2010 at 7:40 am:
“Yet you support a man and his work product who stated under oath in a court of law that breaking the law for the common good (his version of it, by the way) is justified. Yeh right, you’re “squeaky clean”… and I’m an astronaut.”
I don’t support him or his work product. I recognize that the work product is pretty good though. What people like me need to see are alternatives. If the station data actually show something significantly different than Hansen finds with GISTEMP, then what I would expect to find was a temperature record that very much disagrees with GISTEMP. That’s really the only way GISTEMP is ever going to be shown to be wrong, you need a benchmark.
The GISS maybe behind MetOffice when it comes to quality control, but even the UK based data also has problems.
The month below for Novemebr 2010 shows widespread below normal temperatures.
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/anomacts/2010/11/2010_11_MeanTemp_Anomaly_1961-1990.gif
The version adjusted for climate shown below shows above normal temperatures widespread for November 2010.
http://hadobs.metoffice.com/hadcrut3/diagnostics/monthly/anomaly.png
Just goes to shows that literally the climate is not weather from the Met Office. It doesn’t matter how cold the weather is in one month, the climate version is always above average.
SST’s are taken into account for the climate version, but below do not show this warming enough to change a negative anomaly to a positive one. If it is like this for the very country it is based, what is it like for other countries especailly not well represented.
http://weather.unisys.com/archive/sst/sst_anom-101107.gif
http://weather.unisys.com/archive/sst/sst_anom-101114.gif
http://weather.unisys.com/archive/sst/sst_anom-101121.gif
http://weather.unisys.com/archive/sst/sst_anom-101128.gif
Let’s see how next months appears with recent SST’s around the UK very cold.
http://weather.unisys.com/archive/sst/sst_anom-101219.gif
boballab says:
December 26, 2010 at 2:35 am
You are totally wrong on this, and confuse accuracy with precision. I knew someone would jump up and do this, but my writing had gone too long as it was.
Accuracy is irrelevant to the current discussion of whether it is colder or hotter today.
Look up accuracy, precision, and reproducibility. You can continue to improve accuracy with newer and newer instrumentation, but that is useless when trying to answer the main premise of this thread—is it colder or hotter today? I can measure your weight with a balance that goes to six decimal places, but that does not tell me if you gained or lost weight. The extra useless decimal places will actually make it worse, as people with your understanding will just argue about things like whether to round up or down, or whether one holds his breath or not.
I wish I had a hundred thermometers around the globe that are reading 20° high, and in operation for two hundred years, instead of a handful of satellites in operation fro 30 years. Think about it.
wsbriggs says:
December 26, 2010 at 8:04 am
You said it best. I would take one honest scientist of 1900 A.D. with a mercury thermometer over a hundred dishonest climate scientists with a thousand satellites today.
The email states “I didn’t keep all the data” It’s unclear if this means that Sato really didn’t keep the data or didn’t keep the analysis that was done.
Either option; his work is not traceable and is garbage, he should not be working at the job he has, and his supervisors should not be in their positions if they allow such GIGO to continue.
I didn’t realize that only three years ago, climate science was in the dark ages….
….my goodness, how that science has improved in only three years
At least that’s the only explanation that can justify this:
http://climateaudit.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/nasa_us_adjustments.png?w=480&h=480
http://climateaudit.org/2010/12/26/nasa-giss-adjusting-the-adjustments/
😉 (Just rap… sorry)
I’ll say it another way:
It is absurd to compare 1930s data with 1990s data, comparing an old measurement with a measurement that only goes back 30 years, no matter how “accurate” the new method is, and then say it is warmer under the new measurement. This is apples and oranges.
John McManus says on December 26, 2010 at 8:46 am
And more than Russia and Ukraine, eh? Oh the hypocrisy is staggering. Especially since the topic is whether or not we care if 2010 is the warmest year in history (which I doubt).
If such a staightforward questions requires such obscure and recurring analysis then what can it possibly mean? We are pretty sure to live warmer and colder years in the next decades. The warmest year debate appears to be just another propaganda issue to cover the real issue: we know still very little about the climate system’s complexity, do not have a clue of the mangitude of the impact of AGHG and, foremost, have no concept of what to do about any adverse consequences in an intelligent manner.
Onion says:
December 26, 2010 at 8:53 am
Did you follow E.M. Smith’s links waaaay above in response to you? I doesn’t seem to me that you did. I could be wrong.