Abrupt changes in GHCN station-level temperature records contradict the anthropogenic global warming (AGW) claims.

Guest post by Jens Raunsø Jensen

Preamble

Inspired by a statement by Dr. Kevin Trenberth in the e-mails referred to as Climategate 2.0 (#3946 discussed here), it is hoped that climate scientists will have “an open enough mind to even consider” that the global warming of the 20th century could have occurred mainly as abrupt changes in mean temperature linked with natural events. Observational data supports that claim, at variance with the AGW “consensus view”.

Summary

Abrupt or step changes in temperature regime has been the subject of many discussions on this and other blogs and in the peer reviewed literature. The issue is not only statistical. More importantly, any presence of major step changes in mean temperature regime may contradict the claims of the AGW theory and models, i.e. the claims of increasing and accelerating temperature and of human emissions of GHGs being the major cause for the relatively high temperatures in the second half of the 20th century.

In this post, 232 complete and unadjusted GHCN station records are analysed for step changes in the period 1960-2010, and it is argued that:

  • Abrupt changes in temperature linked with natural climate events may be widely responsible for the “global warming” during the second half of the 20th century.
  • 50% of sample stations have not experienced increased mean temperature (”warming”) for more than 18 years.
  • 70% of Europe stations have not experienced warming for more than 20 years.
  • The relative role of natural processes in global warming is very likely underestimated by IPCC.
  • The global average temperature curve is ”apples and oranges” and is widely misinterpreted using linear trend and smoothing techniques as indicating a pattern of widespread uniformly increasing temperature.

Objective and methodology.

The post is in continuation to my earlier post on the subject (http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/08/11/global-warming-%e2%80%93-step-changes-driven-by-enso/ ), now including a near-global station level analysis. The post is based on a ppt presentation including additional details given at a researcher’s workshop at University of Copenhagen, 15th November 2011 (http://www.danishwaterforum.dk/activities/Researchers_Day_Climate_Change_Impact_2011.html ).

The objective with this analysis has been (i) to examine the land-based temperature records at station and higher levels for the presence of step changes during the period 1960-2010, and (ii) to assess the implications for our assessment of global warming during that period. Please note that the objective has not been to dismiss a (likely) presence of an anthropogenic warming signal, or to establish a climate model, or to make projections for the future. The issue is step changes in observational data during 1960-2010.

I have used the documented Regime Shift Detection tool of Rodionov (2004, 2006; www.beringclimate.noaa.gov/ ). The results are considered to be statistically robust (ref. the ppt presentation for details on parameter settings and a verification of the assumptions of constant variance and a likely negligible influence of autocorrelation).

The station level data is from GHCN (“after combine”, http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/station_data/ ) and include ALL stations with a complete record in the period 1960-2010 in broadly defined sampling regions (ref. Fig. 1).

A total of 232 stations were identified, with 54% located in Europe and Russia. The sampling criteria result in wide differences between the “regions” in terms of station number, density and distribution. Also, the “regions” are more or less homogeneous climatologically. However, this is not of material importance for the following discussion and conclusions.

Fig. 1. Distribution of sample stations according to sampling criteria.

Results

Significant step changes are widely found in the T-records and representative examples for 3 “regions” are shown in Fig. 2a-c. The temperature increase in the steps is typically of a size which is comparable to the often quoted global warming during the 20th century.

Fig. 2a. Alaska T-anomaly (n=9). Step, 1977; T-change = 1.5 oC; significance 0.000001

Fig. 2b. Fichtelberg, Europe. Step, 1988; T-change = 1.0 oC; significance 0.00009

Fig. 2c. Malacca, South-East Asia. Steps: 1978, 1990 and 1998; T-change = 0.4+0.3+0.4 = 1.1 oC; significance, 0.0004, 0.0007 and 0.003.

Warming during 1960-2010 was clearly a non-linear process at station level, with the step pattern differing among the “regions”. The global average T-anomaly curve, constructed by averaging across station-level T-anomaly curves, is therefore highly deceptive in propagating a message of near-linearly increasing temperatures, contrary to the actual processes at station level. Thus, the global T-anomaly curve is inherently “apples and oranges” and can not be used to identify a meaningful global AGW trend if the step changes are neglected. Then, the apparent AGW trend will in reality mainly capture the aggregated effect of the sudden step changes (as e.g. in Foster and Rahmstorf, 2011).

The steps are concentrated in few short periods. Disregarding 39 steps after 2005 (considered highly uncertain and “in progress”; 2/3 ups and 1/3 downs), it is found that:

  • The steps occur predominantly (58%) in three 3-year periods: 1977/79, 1987/89 and 1997/99 (Fig. 3).
  • 72% of all stations, and more than 50% of stations in each “region” (except Arctic), have one or more steps during these periods (e.g. 89%, 56% and 93% of Europe, Russia and South-East Asia stations, respectively; Fig. 4).
  • 78% of Europe stations have a step change in 1987/89, during which the major part of the entire warming of the 2nd half of the 20th century apparently took place.
  • 2 or 3 steps are common in South-East Asia (especially 1987/89 and 1997/99), but one step only is common in records from Alaska (1977/79), Europe (1987/89) and Russia (1987/89).

Fig. 3. Distribution of step changes by year of change.

Fig. 4. Percent of stations with one or more steps in indicated 3 periods.

Similar step changes are identified in national average records (ref. link to presentation above): US contiguous 48 states (GISS): 1986 and 1998; Australia (BOM): 1979 and 2002; and Denmark (DMI): 1988. The steps in the Global T-records are: Crutem3gl: 1977, 1987 and 1998; GISS L/O: 1977, 1987 and 1998; and Hadcrut3: 1977, 1990 and 1997.

The steps are statistically highly significant. But are they supported by a probable physical cause? The answer must be yes for the majority of steps. The steps occur in a temporal and spatial pattern coinciding with well-documented events and regime changes in the ocean-atmosphere system:

  • 1976/77: the great pacific shift from a “cold” to a “warm” mode (e.g. Trenberth, 1990; Hartmann and Wendler, 2005).
  • 1987/89 and 1997/99: the two clearly most intense El Niños of the period, 1986/88 and 1997/98, with the intensity here defined as event-accumulated nino3.4 anomalies (NOAA’s ONI index); there were two less intense events in 1982 and 1991, the impact of which was probably occluded by the major volcanoes El Chichon and Mt. Pinatubo.
  • A regime shift in NH SST in 1988/89 (Yasunaka and Hanawa, 2005).
  • A new regime of constant temperature after the 1997/98 El Niño, i.e. the now widely accepted “hiatus” in global warming.
  • Documented step changes and regime shifts in marine ecosystems, e.g. the late 1980s in Europe and in the Japan/East Sea.
  • The short-term regionally diverse global impact of ENSO events is generally well-known.

The empirical evidence, from this station level analysis and other sources, is unequivocal: the step changes in mean temperature are likely real and associated with natural events. The physical mechanisms remain to be understood, and this is certainly not to claim, that ENSO events are the only elements of the natural cause-effect chain.

It is therefore concluded, that the major part of the temperature change (global warming) in the 2nd half of the 20th century occurred as abrupt changes in mean temperature associated with natural events in the ocean-atmosphere system. Still, a warming/cooling trend – albeit relatively small compared with the step changes – could of course be hidden by the regime change model. But it seems inconceivable, that steadily increasing CO2 levels could be responsible for the major sudden changes observed as e.g. in Alaska in 1977, Europe in 1988 and South-East Asia in 1998. In principle, the natural events and step changes could have been amplified by human caused warming, but this is currently pure speculation.

Implications when accepting the presence of steps

“Increasing temperature and accelerated warming” : this study does not support general statements like that. The bulk of the “global warming” has likely taken place in abrupt steps, and 50% of the stations analysed has not experienced any significant warming for more than 18 years (Fig. 5). In Europe, 70% of the stations have not experienced significant change in mean temperature for more than 20 years.

In South-East Asia, the median value is 13 years as many stations here also experienced a step change in 1997/98 (Fig. 4).

Fig. 5. Years of constant T-mean prior to 2010. Box-Whisker plot, 1st and 3rd quartiles. (note: uncertain up and down step changes during 2006-2010 are disregarded).

Challenging the IPCC consensus view, i.e.: “Most of the observed increase in global average temperature since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse-gas concentrations”. However, the finding above, that abrupt changes linked with natural processes likely account for most of the increase in temperature during 1960-2010, contradicts the IPCC claim regarding the relative importance of natural and human causes. Thus, when IPCC (AR4) can only reproduce the T-curve by including GHG effects, then logically

  • either the IPCC GCM models do not adequately model the natural processes of high significance for the temperature variations (there is still low confidence in the projection of changes in the ENSO variability and frequency of El Niños, ref. the recent SREX-SPM IPCC report),
  • or/and the IPCC has overestimated the climate sensitivity to CO2 changes by eg. attributing natural temperature increases to CO2-induced feed-back processes.

    In either case, the relative importance of natural processes for the T-changes has likely been underestimated by IPCC.

Conclusion

This study has established that step changes in land-based temperature records during 1960-2010 are common and very likely real and linked with natural climate events. The step changes are statistically highly significant and with a systematic yet regionally diverse pattern of occurrence coinciding with major climate events and regime shifts. This finding has far reaching consequences for our analysis of climate records and for our assessment of global warming.

Thus, although many different statistical models can be applied to explore the pattern of T-change, the presence of step changes invalidates the widely used statistical techniques of linear trend and smoothing as means of identifying the pattern of temperature variation during 1960-2010.

Furthermore, the step changes account for the main part of the temperature changes during the 2nd half of the 20th century. The logical consequence is that natural processes have been the major cause for the temperature change during this period, leaving a secondary role to other causes such as the anthropogenic greenhouse effect.

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January 5, 2012 10:59 am

R.Gates says:
Some would also posit that this net energy gain by the oceans is at least part of extra energy kept in the system from the additional greenhouse gases.
Henry@R.Gates
Did anyone ever measure the change in humidity over the years?
After looking at the daily average readings from about 20 weather stations all over the world I am finding a change of about -0.02%RH per annum, global average.
http://www.letterdash.com/HenryP/henrys-pool-table-on-global-warming
So, if this estimate is not far from being correct, then the average global humidity is now about o.75% RH lower than it was 37 years ago.
If I am not mistaken (at 15 degrees C) that translates again to a loss of about 0.1% in absolute humidity.
You see how that compares with the increase in CO2? (0.01% increase over the last 50 years)

January 5, 2012 10:59 am

‘a physicist’ says:
“As the graph shows, the steady increase in our sun’s hotness has been offset by a steady decrease in planetary CO2 levels.”
Don’t be ridiculous. The sun’s temperature [or “hotness”] has steadily increased, while CO2 levels have fluctuated. Thus your conclusion is bunkum.

Ralph
January 5, 2012 11:10 am

>>This study has established that step changes in land-based
>>temperature records during 1960-2010 are common and very
>>likely real and linked with natural climate events.
Let’s rewrite that for you:
“”This study has established that step changes in land-based temperature records during 1960-2010 are common and very likely to be linked to scientists ‘rebasing’, ‘adjusting’ or ‘fiddling’ the figures.””
It all seems rather reminiscent of the ‘adjustments’ Anthony Watts’ discovered in station records. Check out this article by Willis Eschenbach on the rebasing of Darwin’s record, which turned a cooling trend into a warming trend.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/the-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/
.

highflight56433
January 5, 2012 11:13 am

Leif says: “Why are the steps always going up?”
There are no steps. The steps are a statistical manipulation. There is no point in arguing it other than it shows another method to illustrate a change in temperatures that were chosen over a period of time out of context. Leif set you up on a side show.

R. Gates
January 5, 2012 11:20 am

highflight56433 says:
January 5, 2012 at 10:27 am
(to R. Gates)
You crack me up with your constant position that it is all about anthropogenic forcing. Mankind is doomed. Also, you NEVER explain any other warming period. Anyway, thanks again for reminding me I am at fault for warming the planet every time I exhale. By the way, do you use paper products?
_____
Funny, but my very point was that it was not all about the anthropogenic forcing, but rather the “step ups” were precisely the times that natural variability (i.e solar, oceans, volcanic) aligned themselves in the same direction as the underlying upward linear trend from greenhouse gas forcing. Also, as I have not mentioned “catastrophic” effects from the lont-term forcing from anthropogenic greenhouse gases, your “Mankind is doomed” comment seems to be coming from you, as it certainly isn’t from me.

Ralph
January 5, 2012 11:21 am

>>The common-sense possibility that seriously worries many
>>climatologists is that we carbon-burning humans are irretrievably
>>breaking the CO2 offset mechanism that Latitude’s graph shows so vividly.
And the common-sense possibility that seriously worries many botanists, is that if the CO2 levels continued southwards below 250 ppm, then all plant life would die. The industrial Revolution happened at an opportune moment, and has prevented botanical asphyxiation.
.

David, UK
January 5, 2012 11:22 am

R. Gates said: “Global temps will “step up” during these alignments of natural and anthropogenic forcings, and while they may fall back from the peaks of these “step up” periods, they never fall back to lower levels that break the underlying the long-term anthropogenic warming.”
But why is it not a case of “they never fall back to lower levels that break the underlying long-term natural rise that started at the end of the LIA?” Sorry if this seems like a really stupid question.

Marian
January 5, 2012 11:24 am

While we’re on about temp data.
I see the hopeless NZ Chicken Little AGW/CC Lemmings over at Hot Topic have awarded WUWT a Climate BS Award, re take on the BEST Data.
Gee it’s Rich coming from them. Considering the Numerous Climate BS Awards that could go for fraud, dishonesty and over exaggerations, etc to AGW/CC!
Prat Watch #2: the 2011 Climate BS Awards
http://hot-topic.co.nz/2011-climate-bs-awards/

January 5, 2012 11:27 am

Leif Svalgaard says:
January 5, 2012 at 7:33 am
Why are the “steps” always up?

Because of the short time frame involved?

Latitude
January 5, 2012 11:27 am

show of hands…..
…how many fell for the “steps” bait

R. Gates
January 5, 2012 11:36 am

Michael J Alexander says:
January 5, 2012 at 10:14 am
(to R Gates):
“If the rise in air temps are cause (more) by the oceans releasing more of its stored heat in steps rather than increases caused by extra GHG emissions , then the F & R assessment is simply incorrect.”
_____
The rise in atmospheric temperature are is not singularly caused by the oceans releasing more heat than they take up during El Ninos as FR2011 showed quite clearly an underlying linear rise in atmospheric temperatures when factoring out the energy added to the atmosphere from El Ninos. FR2011 showed that the natural variations will sometimes work with, and sometimes work against anthropogenic greenhouse forcing, and it’s also important to remember that other anthropogenic forcings, such as from aerosols, can also work in the opposite direction to greenhouse forcing.
Here’s the best thing about the FR2011 study– it makes a specific, verifiable prediction going forward, as it gives a specfic linear rise in temperatures that should be seen quite readily in future years once the natural variability is factored out. In some years the natural variability will add to this longer-term linear rise and some years it will work against it, but the underying rise should always be there (because the greenhouse gases are surely going to be). Skeptics are always wanting specific ways that AGW can be disproven…well, here you go.

R. Gates
January 5, 2012 11:41 am

David, UK says:
January 5, 2012 at 11:22 am
R. Gates said: “Global temps will “step up” during these alignments of natural and anthropogenic forcings, and while they may fall back from the peaks of these “step up” periods, they never fall back to lower levels that break the underlying the long-term anthropogenic warming.”
But why is it not a case of “they never fall back to lower levels that break the underlying long-term natural rise that started at the end of the LIA?” Sorry if this seems like a really stupid question.
_____
Simply put, the greenhouse forcings from the 40% additional CO2, and similar increases in NH2 and N2O are always present and collectively they present that linear rising “baseline” trend that FR2011 found, and around which natural variations from solar, oceans, volcanic can only vary up or down for shorter perids, but they can’t and don’t affect the long-term upward forcing.

A physicist
January 5, 2012 11:43 am

The common-sense possibility that seriously worries many climatologists is that we carbon-burning humans are irretrievably breaking the CO2 offset mechanism that Latitude’s graph shows so vividly.

Ralph says: And the common-sense possibility that seriously worries many botanists, is that if the CO2 levels continued southwards below 250 ppm, then all plant life would die. The industrial Revolution happened at an opportune moment, and has prevented botanical asphyxiation.

Ralph, that claim is truly remarkable, in that (personally) I have never seen it made by any scientist (botanist or otherwise).
As Willis Eschenbach is fond of requesting (and quite rightly), could you please provide some citations to the effect that declining CO2 levels “seriously worry many botanists”? Thanks!

Septic Matthew
January 5, 2012 11:43 am

JT: Lets not forget that a complex, chaotic, non-linear system like the climate system might respond to a steady anthropogenic forcing with discrete (stepwise) state changes. Thus the contention that
“The logical consequence is that natural processes have been the major cause for the temperature change during this period, leaving a secondary role to other causes such as the anthropogenic greenhouse effect.”
is not necessarily correct as it could be that the observed “natural processes” are themselves the natural effects of the anthropogenic greenhouse cause.
However, I do agree that
“the presence of step changes invalidates the widely used statistical techniques of linear trend and smoothing as means of identifying the pattern of temperature variation during 1960-2010″

The best measure of the gradually accumulating heat might be the gradually increasing mean temperature, even as the distribution of the heat has the stepwise character presented in the main post. I mention this as a possibility; I don’t disagree with what you wrote.

R. Gates
January 5, 2012 11:47 am

Ralph says:
January 5, 2012 at 11:21 am
And the common-sense possibility that seriously worries many botanists, is that if the CO2 levels continued southwards below 250 ppm, then all plant life would die. The industrial Revolution happened at an opportune moment, and has prevented botanical asphyxiation.
____
We didn’t get “botanical asphyxiation” during the past several million years of cycles of glacial advances when CO2 levels would routinely drop to 180ppm, so the notion that we’d get is when levels dropped below 250 ppm is of course unfounded on any science, or logic for that matter.

highflight56433
January 5, 2012 12:09 pm

R. Gates says: “Funny, but my very point was that it was not all about the anthropogenic forcing, but rather the “step ups” were precisely the times that natural variability (i.e solar, oceans, volcanic) aligned themselves in the same direction as the underlying upward linear trend from greenhouse gas forcing. Also, as I have not mentioned “catastrophic” effects from the lont-term forcing from anthropogenic greenhouse gases, your “Mankind is doomed” comment seems to be coming from you, as it certainly isn’t from me.”
My case made. You do not go any where but the same mantra.

January 5, 2012 12:16 pm

R Gates cites the work of Foster & Rahmstorf (F&R) which suggested that after removing exogenous factors from the temperature records (El Ninos/Ninas, Volcanoes and TSI) you are left with a more-or-less steady rate of temperature increase. The question is “Is the work of F&R compatible with Jensen’s claim that much of the temperature increase in the last few decades occurs in step changes?”
In his analysis of the Hockey Stick, Steve McIntyre showed that feeding a stochastic red-noise data set into his approximation of the Mann algorithm inevitably produced a Hockey Stick. It would be interesting to start with an F&R temperature linear series, add in stochastically the ‘noise’ around that series, add in the same three factors and see how often, if at all, the Regime Shift Detection tool of Rodionov found ‘steps’ in the synthetic data sets.

PRD
January 5, 2012 12:19 pm

R. Gates says:
January 5, 2012 at 11:47 am
We didn’t get “botanical asphyxiation” during the past several million years of cycles of glacial advances when CO2 levels would routinely drop to 180ppm, so the notion that we’d get is when levels dropped below 250 ppm is of course unfounded on any science, or logic for that matter.
Try this simple experiment, Mr. Gates. Put your ivy, or whatever little plant you might have into a sealed glass container with adequate soil and moisture. Put it near a sunny window so that it continues to receive adequate sunlight. Without ever opening the container or allowing an exchange of the atmosphere sealed within the container, measure the growth. Alongside this container have an identical plant in the same soil and same soil volume that also receives adequate moisture and sunlight. Talk to this uncontained plant whenever practical.
Measure the growth of these two plants over the course of a month, two months, etc.
This should suitably display what a lack of CO2 will do for plants that otherwise have little to no other limiting factor to their growth. (Liebigs law)

R. Gates
January 5, 2012 12:20 pm

highflight56433 says:
January 5, 2012 at 12:09 pm
R. Gates says: “Funny, but my very point was that it was not all about the anthropogenic forcing, but rather the “step ups” were precisely the times that natural variability (i.e solar, oceans, volcanic) aligned themselves in the same direction as the underlying upward linear trend from greenhouse gas forcing. Also, as I have not mentioned “catastrophic” effects from the lont-term forcing from anthropogenic greenhouse gases, your “Mankind is doomed” comment seems to be coming from you, as it certainly isn’t from me.”
My case made. You do not go any where but the same mantra.
____
Your case made? I suppose if your “case” is to try to prove that black is white, or visa versa.
And in respect to my going to the same “mantra”…it is the nice thing about the laws of physics that they are so consistent.

January 5, 2012 12:35 pm

“The station level data is from GHCN (“after combine”, http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/station_data/ ) and include ALL stations with a complete record in the period 1960-2010 in broadly defined sampling regions (ref. Fig. 1).”
oh dear.
there’s your problem sparky.
1. you are using an old dataset
2. looks like you’ve found one of the things we already knew about RSM.. you realize
that “after combine” means after the old RSM method is applied. You are looking
at stations that have been “combined” by GISS to create artifical “new” stations from a
collection of pieces. It’s not GHCN data after that step.
If you want to do regime shift detection ( I used that package back in 2007-2008) I would
suggest that you
1. Not get your data from the GISS site, but go directly to the source: Ghcn monthly, or better
Ghcn daily.
2.. Not use data where stations have been “combined” . Either use raw or homogenized
3. Have a look at some of the better struc change packages out there ( see Cran )
4. look at the US records as well.

Justin K
January 5, 2012 12:45 pm

@R. Gates said:
And in respect to my going to the same “mantra”…it is the nice thing about the laws of physics that they are so consistent.
——————————–
Ahhh, but that is not technically accurate as the laws of physics are not consistent as they are applied differently depending on the scale, i.e. large bodied objects’ behavior can be predicted by classical Newtonian physics and small bodied objects’ behavior can be predicted by quantum physics.

Peter Miller
January 5, 2012 1:13 pm

So, as any decent geologist will confirm, climate change is normal and natural – at least it has been for at least the last 600 million years.. The only question remains is just how much of the global temperature rise of ~0.7 degrees C over the past 150 years is man made and howmuch is natural climate cycles.
The alarmists say the rise is all the fault of man, while the sceptics say man could have caused around 20-30% of the warming.
The alarmists want to try and fix the climate to stay a steady state, which is obviously impossible to all but the most simple minded. The cost of trying to achieve this impossible goal will beggar the western world, while the eastern world just looks on and laughs at the stupidity of our politicians promoting this alarmist nonsense.

stuartlynne
January 5, 2012 1:15 pm

Has there been any work done to look at the data being collected from thousands of small weather stations around the world by http://www.wunderground.com/ ? Something like 12,000 in the US alone, over 20,000 world wide.
REPLY: No, and the problem with those is that many are even more problematic in siting than USHCN and GHCN stations. Plus, many are these cheap Chinese POS weather stations made by Oregon Scientific and LaCrosse – from experience I can tell you they lack out of the box accuracy and have tendency to drift over the long term. Exposure of the thermometer sensors in these is also very problematic. There are some good stations in this network, such as Davis Vantage Pro which have NIST traceable calibrations, but the siting of these is still a big unknown. – Anthony

January 5, 2012 1:15 pm

Changes in a global average is not evidence for a global effect as the cause.
While I applaud a regional analysis, this study to a degree falls into the same logical fallacy (of underlying global causes).
Without a plausible mechanism, I’m inclined to think the steps are a statistical artifact (of the method).
R Gates said,
it’s also important to remember that other anthropogenic forcings, such as from aerosols, can also work in the opposite direction to greenhouse forcing.
In recent decades global aerosol levels have declined, which means the aerosol forcing has been in the same direction as GHGs (ie warming).

Rob R
January 5, 2012 1:24 pm

Step changes in average surface temperature are present in regions that are not highlighted in this post. For instance there was a major upward step change in New Zealand in the mid 1950’s that was followed by 60 years of relatively flat trend, particularly in the South Island.
I am personally suspicious of arguments that the various step changes can simply be averaged out to give the global AGW signal. If ultimately we start to see numerous (natural) regional step changes in the other direction then how are the alarmists going to rationalise that?