Guest post by Chip Knappenberger, originally on Master Resource
“Today’s temperature ‘extremes’ are simply yesterday’s extremes warmed up a bit, partly from the heat-island effect. But they are not new events…. Hansen’s push on weather extremes is another case where the level of alarm is disproportionate to the level of impact.” – Chip Knappenberger
Today’s temperature “extremes” are simply yesterday’s extremes warmed up a bit, partly from the heat-island effect. But they are not new events where none existed prior.
This distinction is neither subtle nor unimportant. When it comes to temperatures, yesterday’s extremes warmed up offer less of a surprise (and hence a greater ease of adaptability) than if a new crop of extreme events suddenly sprung up out of nowhere to catch us unprepared.
But such a distinction is not made prominently evident in the latest work by NASA’s James Hansen—and even less so in the accompanying media coverage (including that instigated by Hansen himself). Instead, the general audience is left with the distinct impression that anthropogenic global warming (as a result of greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel-based energy production) is leading to the occurrence of new extreme weather events when and where such weather events would not otherwise have occurred. For instance, in a Washington Post op-ed written by Hansen to accompany the release of his paper recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Hansen writes:
Our analysis shows that it is no longer enough to say that global warming will increase the likelihood of extreme weather and to repeat the caveat that no individual weather event can be directly linked to climate change. To the contrary, our analysis shows that, for the extreme hot weather of the recent past, there is virtually no explanation other than climate change.
The deadly European heat wave of 2003, the fiery Russian heat wave of 2010 and catastrophic droughts in Texas and Oklahoma last year can each be attributed to climate change. And once the data are gathered in a few weeks’ time, it’s likely that the same will be true for the extremely hot summer the United States is suffering through right now.
But this impression is untrue. These events and others like them, almost certainly would have occurred on their own (i.e., naturally). Climate change may have added a pinch of additional heat, but it almost certainly did not create these events out of thin air (see here for example).
But Hansen pushes this impression with his analogy of “Climate Dice.” The idea is that anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions have “loaded” the dice towards extreme warmth, so now when Mother Nature rolls the dice for summer weather, there is better chance of rolling a heat wave, or an overall hot summer—events discreet from events that were contained on the unloaded dice.
But Hansen’s hot summers are not new discrete events at all. Instead, they are the naturally occurring hot summers with a few extra degrees added to them. The extra couple of degrees push some summers over an arbitrarily defined threshold temperature above which Hansen classifies them as being “extreme.”
Hansen’s threshold between a “normal” summer and an “extreme” summer has no physical meaning—instead it is rooted in statistics. While certainly some temperature thresholds exist that have physical meaning—like the 32°F, the freezing/melting point of water/ice—none exist in the range of temperatures which characterize summer across much of the globe. Whether or not the average summertime temperature is greater or less than some arbitrary value is of little practical significance.
Washington, D.C. Example
Let’s take the nation’s capital as an example. The mean summer (June through August) temperature in DC during the 30 year “base” period used by Hansen (1951-1980) was 77.0°F. The standard deviation—a statistical measure of the amount of year-to-year variability that exists about the average—was 1.2°F. Statistically, 67% of all values lie within one standard deviation of the mean.
For Washington DC, it means that 2/3rds of summers between 1951 and 1980 should have had an average temperature between 75.8°F and 78.2°F. Again, statistically speaking, 95% of all average summer temperatures should lie within two standard deviations, or between 74.6°F and 79.4°F. And less than one-half of 1% of all summer average temperatures should lie outside three standard deviations from the mean.
Hansen defines an “extreme” summer as one that is hotter than 3 standard deviations above the mean. So, for Washington DC that would mean a summer with an average temperature greater than 80.6°F—a situation that would almost never occur in the climate of 1951-1980 in DC.
Now let’s fast forward to the climate of the most recent 30 years. During the period from 1983-2012, the average summer temperature was 78.0°F—a full degree higher than it was during the base period. And, two summers (2009 and 2010) exceeded 80.6°F (that is, were more than 3 standard deviations above the 1951-1980 average). By Hansen’s reckoning, these were global warming induced climate “extremes.”
But are these hot summers entirely caused by global warming (or rather, climate change)?
If we went back and added 1°F to each summer from 1951 to 1980, one of them would have exceeded three standard deviations, and several others would have been close. In other words, the current climate of DC is pretty similar to the past climate of DC, just warmed up a bit. It is not a completely new climate replete with a different array of extreme events conjured up by human greenhouse gas emissions.
So yes, it is true that summers in DC are hotter than they once were. But local land-use changes (the increased heat-island effect) are largely to blame.
Compared to past climates, more summers now meet Hansen’s arbitrary definition of being “extremely” hot. But climate warming is not responsible for all the heat, instead it just adds some warmth to what would have been a hot summer anyway.
Certainly, the hotter it is in DC, the more air conditioners run and other costs incur as well. And quite possibly, the costs increase in some non-linear fashion (see here for a discussion). But, it is almost certain as well that the costs do not rise anywhere near as swiftly as the tally of events crossing some arbitrary threshold by which to define and “extreme” event.
Hansen’s push on weather extremes is another case where the level of alarm is disproportionate to the level of impact.
Addendum:
John Christy took a further look at the occurrences of weather extremes, as well as how Hansen’s recent analysis does not fairly represent them, in testimony last week before the House Energy and Power Subcommittee. It is worth checking out (see here).

McIntyre constructed the correct chart.
No, McIntyre constructed a chart, but not necessarily the correct one. There are many others that confirm Mann, including peer-reviewed, and with various combinations of proxies. McIntyre gets “audited” too, you could find it if you looked.
puppy
Relax.
Thomas T.:
In the first place, this statement is misleading in an elementary way. Journalistic sources like Newsweek do not create such stories out of whole cloth. They may exaggerate, or more often quote selectively, but they do not create their reports de novo. There is always some sort of ‘authoritative’ source.
Global cooling was first noted in the early 60’s, and by the early 70’s it was definitely a topic on climatology’s agenda. Here’s a typical quote from that time:
This is from Lamb, Geogr. J., 1966, 132: 183. These studies continued, and by the mid-70’s people were also noting, (i) that past famines in Europe were associated with cold periods (Thoroddsen, cited in Bryson, Science, 1974, 184:753), (ii) that there were increasing pressures on grain supply (Thompson, Science, 1975, 188:535). Since these discussions were appearing in prominent places in the scientific literature, which journalists often monitor, it’s not surprising that this discussion then made its way to the mass media. In addition, the idea of the threat of cooling was discussed in semi-popular books such as Nigel Calder’s The Weather Machine (1974) and Lowell Ponte’s The Cooling (1976). Both works include discussions of the CO2 hypothesis and the possibility of future warming, but they emphasize the idea of continued cooling (e.g. the final chapter of Calder’s book is titled The Threat of Ice).
So there was a lot more going on around the idea of global cooling than one or two articles in the mass media.
Shouldn’t we focus a bit on the point that, even if the climate dice are loaded the way Hansen proposes, it would mean that extreme cold is expected to decrease to approximately the same extent as extreme heat is increased. There’s lot of research to show that extreme cold is more harmful than extreme heat. So perhaps the dice are loaded in our favor.
You claim that a very significant amount of the last summer’s heat can be attributed to airconditioning as it pumps hot air out of the interiors of buildings.
This is OK when we consider the temperatures in cities, but I was under the impression (I live in Australia) that high temperatures prevailed all over the USA, in the countryside as well as in the cities. If this is the case then it is unintelligent to make such a fuss about land use and airconditioning use in the cities. There is already enough evidence to show that even hot summers fall within the ranges of natural variability and that very hot summers occurred before man made CO2 was present at any significant level.
Let’s not make false arguments that are easily defeated; there are sufficient good arguments to convince anyone with an open mind.