A note about temperatures

Guest commentary by John Coleman

(reprinted from KUSI-TV by Mr. Coleman’s request)

Was July 2012 the hottest July in United States history? Was the last 12 months period the warmest ever? NOAA,the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, says “Yes”. The agency released a map and statement in early August stating without reservation that July 2012 and the last 12 months were the hottest ever. The national media gave the report a “headline play” as we say in the media business. And, many of the media stories linked this hot weather with global warming.

However, skeptical scientists have produced studies that show that the last 15 years have seen a cooling in the United States. This is the NOAA NCDC Climate at a Glance US annual mean temperature trend the last 15 years.

No doubt it has been very, very hot and very, very dry. But if you check the facts behind these reports the claims are not all that certain. Consider this; the data behind the NOAA claims shows the average temperature in July 2012 was only 2/10ths of one degree warmer than July 1936. And there are several papers posted on the internet that claim that if the temperatures and the means of processing the data had not been “adjusted” several times in the past 50 years, 1934 would still be the warmest year ever, considerably warmer that the last 12 months. I conclude that while there is some basis for the NOAA record warmth position those who challenge NOAA’s claims also make good cases. And it seems to me that while the recent hot, dry weather is clearly out of the ordinary, as it stands for now, it is not the sort of extreme event that might prove global warming. And, any connection between the hot, dry weather and warming caused by the activities of mankind remains totally unproven.

Global warming is about a predicted dramatic increase in the temperature year after year leading to the melting of the polar ice caps resulting in a dramatic rise in ocean water levels producing coastal flooding. It also predicts non-stop droughts, massive world-wide, killer heat waves and super storms. Were the conditions that have developed in the United States this summer to become world-wide (which they have not) and continue to increase in intensity for year after year for a decade, that would be the sort of global warming event that would lead to the devastating results predicted by Al Gore and the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The runaway heating predicted by the global warming advocates’ computer models, is predicted to occur as a result of the activities of our civilized society, primarily the use of fossil fuels to generate electricity and to fuel internal combustion engines in cars and trucks and power jet airplanes. The theory is that carbon dioxide (CO2) in the exhaust from burning fossil fuels is an extraordinary greenhouse gas that amplifies the greenhouse effect in our atmosphere. Even if the predicted warming of the climate occurs, that does not prove the CO2 causative theory. So far efforts to prove that theory with computer models are totally off of the mark.

Mankind began to burn coal extensively in around 1770 and to use oil extensively starting in the 1880s. The use of fossil fuels greatly increased between 1945 to 2000. A measure of the atmospheric CO2 known as the Keeling Curve (named for the Scientist who set up the measuring system) shows a steady rise in atmospheric CO2 as a result. (Despite the increase, the total of CO2 remains much less than 1% of the atmosphere.)

Carbon Dioxide Concentration at Mauna Loa, Hawaii
The Keeling Curve

So a key question in the global warming debate has been “How much warming have we experienced so far as a result of our use of fossil fuels and the related release of carbon dioxide exhaust into the atmosphere?”

This seems as though it would be a very simple question to answer. To get the answer you just simply look at the chart of average temperatures through the years and measure the warming. Compare the warming since man has been using fossil fuels with the warming in a similar period before that and bingo, the influence of mankind’s activities should be clear. You might be surprised to hear that there are lots of complications that make this seemingly simple exercise impossible.

So what are the complications? After all, despite what anyone else has said or done, shouldn’t anyone be able to take all of the temperatures recorded across the nation, average them out to get the temperature for each hour and then average all 24 hours at the end of the day, resulting in the average for that day, and so on?

Well, it turns out that is not possible because only a few pre-selected long term observation records have been saved on a raw, long term, hour by hour and day by day basis. The great mass of long term temperature records are not available. Basically the historical data available is not in a format that lends itself to basic, start-over analysis.

There has been a long series of competing research reports, papers, charts and documents on historical temperatures and the long term trends. There is no consensus on what they show and why, just prolonged and spirited debate among the scientists. In the end, I fear, neither side is going to “win” this argument.

My friend Anthony Watts,  a Chico, California based Meteorologist and the man who hosts the Wattsupwiththat website, which is the most popular climate website in the world, and several other scientists have recently released a draft version of a new paper detailing a re-analysis of the temperature data for the United States. They applied a recently developed but well accepted international process, to separate long term U.S.temperatures from a pre-selected set of “official” weather observation points. They concluded that the temperature adjustments used by the National Oceanographic and Ocean Administration produce a temperature increase of 0.30 degrees Celsius per decade, while this new method results in half as much of an increase; 0.15 degrees Celsius per decade. This paper has met with both cheers and jeers in the meteorology community. It is a big deal. But, in the end, I fear it will be countered by a paper that uses still another method of analysis and the debate will only go on and on.

Let’s look at the history. There were no actual thermometers until after 1724 when a man named Fahrenheit made the very first one. All temperature data before that is calculated using such methods as analyzing tree rings and ice cores. While the scientists who do that work are certain that they produce accurate data, there are all sorts of issues such as what type of tree rings to use, the geographic distribution of the trees, how to figure the temperature since other issues such as the amount and time of rainfall also influence the tree’s growth. And ice cores are clearly only in the polar regions and mountain glaciers, and don’t represent the entire world temperature pattern. I can accept basic trends from these systems, but I have trouble believing they produce temperature records with the accuracy of greater than ±2 or 3 degrees.

As for the thermometer, the early ones were crude; tubes of colored mercury were stapled onto wooden backboards with degree markers printed on them. How accurate a temperature reading can you get from looking at something like that? I conclude that you should not regard those readings to be accurate within a tenth of a degree. And actually I am skeptical of even ±one degree.

In the early days of the Weather Bureau here in the United States,the thermometers were housed in little wooden, louvered boxes with legs that held them five feet above the surface. A study by Watts several years ago showed that whether the boxes were painted white or white-washed actually had a measurable impact on the temperatures on the thermometers inside.

For many years some of these measurements were made on the roof tops of buildings in the middle of cities, while others were in rural pastures. Very often the temperatures were so affected by the siting of the observation point that they had little to do with the average temperature of the surrounding region. This led to studies, again a major one under the direction of Mr. Watts, showing that the “siting” of thermometers is a major issue in producing reliable temperature readings. His volunteer field observers and Anthony himself visited 1007 of the 1221 observations stations in the United States. They found some located near asphalt parking lots, and others near air conditioner exhausts. A trash burning barrel was just a few feet from another official thermometer. So when you look at historical temperature records, it is difficult to know the accuracy of the readings, and how representative they are of the area.

For decades the number of thermometers was rather limited. Weather observation points followed the migration of the population. For years, the thermometers that were used to produce official, written down logs of readings over the long-term were mostly in cities and towns. As aviation developed many official weather observation points moved to airports which were mostly on the edge of the cities or even out in the nearby country side. All of this impacted the temperature readings. Now most major airports are surrounded by extensive business centers, with the heat sink of the expanding runways and the exhaust of the departing jet aircraft affecting the air temperatures as well.

As the United States Weather Bureau was established and evolved, standards for making observations were adopted the data became more reliable. Eventually a National Climate Data Center (NCDC) was established in 1934. Each official observation center then sent a monthly report of temperatures and other weather data from its official weather observation station via a form paper report to the NCDC. In the 1970’s this data was entered into computers for the first time. The monthly paper mailed reports continued for decades, however, and on some level continues today.

As the sites changed and the system of data collection became organized, the thermometers themselves were evolving. Mercury thermometers were replaced with thermocouple thermometers at some weather observation stations in the mid 1900’s. And eventually platinum resistance thermometers [PRT’s], which use a length of platinum wire in series with a resistor to measure temperature, replaced thermocouples. And at many locations those louvered instrument sheds were replaced by metal tubes with fans to circulate the air over the thermometer inside.

Meanwhile, inexpensive battery-powered automated weather stations began to spring up at homes, schools and business everywhere. When the home computer and the internet swept the world, these automated stations hit the world wide web. Soon there were tens of thousands of them. All sorts of websites now display these readings. Eventually even the successor to the Weather Bureau, the National Weather Service (NWS), began to link to them, plot them on maps and redistribute them on official NWS websites. Then came the smart phones and their widgets picked up these automated internet stations. They were eventually organized into an official National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA/NWS) group called Madis (Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System). However, these observations are not saved or used in any official climate data base.

So while hundreds of thousands of temperature records are now available worldwide, the NCDC continues to use only a network of government weather stations. And in recent years it has made extensive data adjustments. In one of these, it altered the older data to supposedly match the current data produced by the newer instruments. This change results in a cooling of the temperatures in the previous decades which has the net effect of making more recent temperatures comparatively warmer and therefore increases the long-term warming of temperatures.

I don’t doubt that there has been a general slow increase in atmosphere temperatures. You must understand this is a natural warming trend, a natural result of the continuing interglacial period that began with the melting of the great ice sheets 12,000 years ago. This warming trend has nothing to do with mankind’s use of fossil fuels.

In the 1980’s NCDC and other agencies that have sprung up as offshoots of NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) began to greatly reduce the number of reporting points used in their temperature calculations. So as tens of thousands of new thermometers came on-line,they trimmed these government agencies were greatly reducing the number observations used in their world-wide temperature calculations. The number used dropped from 6,000 in the 1970s to just 1,500 a decade later. And, the new system averaged these temperatures to produce readings on spaced grid points. As these changes took effect, the average annual temperature produced by their systems, rose quickly as compared to their own temperature charts in previous years. NCDC and supporting researchers have presented numerous scientific papers to justify these changes. Others have produced papers, reports and charts to strongly refute the government agencies claims.

Essentially, much of the distortion may come from the selected observation points not being representative of the average for the grid box in which they are located. The problem of using a relatively few temperatures to represent regions gets very complex in coastal and hill and valley, rural and city complexes. As an example, if a grid box is in west-central Colorado and the observation at Grand Junction is used to present the area. Mountainous terrain that surrounds Grand Junction averages 10 degrees cooler. Think about San Diego County, California where the weather zones range from cool, Pacific coastal 60’s to 80’s in inland valleys, from 40’s to 90’s in mountains ranging up to 7,000 feet high (mountain temperatures vary enormously depending on season) to below sea level desert where temperatures are regularly over 100. How do you pick one or two temperatures to represent this county? Those who have put together and use these grids based on a relatively small set of observations have done studies that they say prove that is all averages out and adding more points to the observation network has little impact on the final averages. I might consider their argument but am totally sure they are out-of-bounds when they start to base claims of record warmest or record increases on measurements based on fractions of a degree or even a degree or two.

In this discussion, so far, I have looked at the temperature issues mostly from the viewpoint of only my home country, the United States. But the matter of temperatures is global. Elsewhere across and around the planet the problems of coming up with reliable data explodes. The United States constitutes less than 4% of the surface of the Earth. On the other hand, the Oceans cover 71% of the Earth’s surface. Deserts, unpopulated mountain ranges, tropical forests and the polar regions cover significant parts of the planet. Historical and even current temperature measurements from these regions remains skimpy to non-existent.

Take the case of the oceans. For 100s of years, we depended on measurements made by freighters and passenger ships to lift a bucket of water from the ocean along their routes and measure the temperature and make reports when they reached port. Later buoys would be used to collect temperatures. The ship buckets were eventually replaced by sensors in the ship intake valves of the ships, a method that measured temperatures at different levels. Ship intake values were slightly warmer than the buoys. Later these buoys placed at intervals off shore radioed in temperatures. In recent years, sophisticated buoys that communicate via satellite have been deployed worldwide. This data from them so far, does not show any significant warming of the ocean water and is being discounted by global warming advocates. In any case, there is not a long-term useable ocean temperature data base to use to produce a meaningful long term data base.

In the past forty years there have been measurements of the total atmospheric temperatures on a global basis from satellites. It system is being used to build a new data base that in a hundred years will make a significant data base for measuring climatic changes. For now, however, forty years is too short-term to be hugely significant. What is does show, for now, the satellite data shows a rather steady, gradual increase in global temperatures in line with the long-term increase over the last 12,000 years. It does not support the dramatic increases predicted by the global warming advocates models.

My friends who are climate change skeptics would say the lack of a dramatic rise is the final “nail in the coffin” for global warming alarmists. I have to hold back on reaching that conclusion. I simply hold to my skeptical position. I don’t believe that carbon dioxide is a major greenhouse gas and our use of fossil fuels is creating a climate crisis now and it will not do so in the future as well. I don’t see any evidence that there is a CO2 “tipping point” when temperatures will go out of the control. In fact, there is evidence that CO2 has been much higher in the historic past.

I also point out that CO2 is fertilizing our crops producing a food supply significantly greater than it would be if we were not adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.

I conclude the temperature data does not prove global warming. The alarmists are wrong. But the temperature data is so unreliable and garbled that neither alarmists or skeptics can use it to conclusively prove they are right.

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93 Comments
James Abbott
March 3, 2013 3:08 pm

This is such a bad article its funny.
Here we are told that we “must understand” (why must ?) that its all a natural trend – a bounce from the last glaciation. Really ? Where is the evidence for a steady increase in temperature throughout this period ? There is strong evidence that the Holocene Optimum was followed by gradual cooling, not warming.
Its good to know that Mr Coleman believes in his science:
“I don’t believe that carbon dioxide is a major greenhouse gas”
Apart from the religious tendency there, tell us what the global mean temperature would be if you take the CO2 out. It would be little different from now on that basis – which is plainly rediculous. Yet again, a skeptic trying to rewrite nearly 200 years of science.

March 3, 2013 3:11 pm

I don’t doubt that there has been a general slow increase in atmosphere temperatures. You must understand this is a natural warming trend, a natural result of the continuing interglacial period that began with the melting of the great ice sheets 12,000 years ago.
Except that the long-term trend has been downward the past 6000 years.

Chad Wozniak
March 3, 2013 3:15 pm

The lack of complete temperature data for past eras doesn’t really matter – the periods of warmth and cold are well documented in the historical record. CAGW alarmists can’t get around the well-attested fact that wine grapes were grown in England and even in Norway and Newfoundland during the MWP (try doing that today). CAGW alarmists can’t get around the fact that at the height of the Roman Empire, many harbors all around the Mediterranean were flourishing that are now high and dry, due to drops in sea level since then.
The obseassion with temperature data seems to tie in with the osession of models. Models will nevereget it right because there are too many variables with too wide variation and too many statistical outliers in that variation.
It’s time that everyone recognized that climate models are a total artificiality, intended solely to manipulate uninformed pepole, mistakenly relying on the modelers’ credentials, into buying a totally false hypothesis, to use as a pretext for a malicious and destructive agenda.. Models prove nothing, except that their makers have compromised their scientific integrity and have abused thr public trust.

March 3, 2013 3:30 pm

My comment at; March 3, 2013 at 3:02 pm Should be.
Because you know, you or anyone else can not attribute any weather event where any individual is responsible for it.

March 3, 2013 3:32 pm

Bad article. The Holocene optimum was warmer and there has been gradual cooling since then.
The issue isn’t whether CO2 is a greenhouse gas it is whether adding more at current levels will make any measurable or noticeable difference.

March 3, 2013 3:33 pm

James Abbott,
Mr Coleman writes: “…skeptical scientists have produced studies that show that the last 15 years have seen a cooling in the United States… In this discussion, so far, I have looked at the temperature issues mostly from the viewpoint of only my home country, the United States.”

James Abbott
March 3, 2013 3:54 pm

D.B. Stealey
Yes he talks about the US in the first half and then goes off on a global ramble in the second half.
Anyway, his central argument is that temperatures have been rising steadily on a long term rebound from the last glaciation.
Unfortunately for Mr Coleman – (a) they have not as many have posted and (b) the US would not have been insulated from that.
I think this is his best bit of science:
“But the matter of temperatures is global. Elsewhere across and around the planet the problems of coming up with reliable data explodes.”
Apart from the glorious hyperbole there, its a daft and transparent attempt to junk all data to weaken the case for global warming. The problem for Mr Coleman is that worldwide, temperature records show similar trends. So they must be all wrong then ? Probability of that ?
What in his article is actually true ?

March 3, 2013 4:20 pm

James Abbott says:
March 3, 2013 at 3:54 pm
Anyway, his central argument is that temperatures have been rising steadily on a long term rebound from the last glaciation.
Which is not true. Temperatures have been trending down the last 6000 years [on their way to the next glaciation in 50,000 years].

maguro
March 3, 2013 4:22 pm

I have a question on “The Keeling Curve” that’s been bothering me for some time. How do we know that the increasing concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is attributable to human activity?
It seems odd to me that the CO2 increase looks so linear, when human CO2 emissions have risen exponentially over the same period. And yet everyone, believer and skeptic alike, seems to accept that the rise in atmoshperic CO2 from 1960 on is due to human activity.
What am I missing? Is it terribly obvious?

March 3, 2013 4:36 pm

James Abbott says:
March 3, 2013 at 3:54 pm
I think Mr Coleman is saying. (In my words) Take a step back. Both sides need to understand this global temperature anomaly and it’s origin and be open and honest about it.

u.k.(us)
March 3, 2013 5:15 pm

Now that that has been settled, what theory should we settle next 🙂

March 3, 2013 5:28 pm

James Abbott says:
March 3, 2013 at 3:54 pm
“What in his article is actually true?”
At first, I suspect that Mr. Coleman’s essay was written too quickly and may suffer from some needed peer review. Many grammatical errors suggest this.
There are a few premises which stand reversing. Yes, we warmed from the end of the Younger Dryas to the hypsithermal, within which timeframe the 8.2k event is to be found. But since that time “…a natural result of the continuing interglacial period that began with the melting of the great ice sheets 12,000 years ago” is not correct. I suggest that since the end of the Little Ice Age the warming we have experienced is not anomalous. Certainly not on a par with the two thermal excursions at the end of the most recent interglacial, the Eemian (MIS-5e), which may have recorded a sea level highstand on the order of +6 to +52M AMSL.
IPCC 2007 AR4 reports worst case of +0.59M by 2100, or “consensus” worst case “signal” coming in at just under 10% of the last end-extreme interglacial normal, natural noise.
However, Mr. Coleman extends, and provides historical context for, eminently reasonable arguments related to the state, and evolution, of whatever primary data sets can even tell us about just a century or two of the post-gunpowder age.
I think the issue Mr. Coleman is driving at could be one of the most vexing of present hominid times. Or do we really get science…….
“We” can, yes, we absolutely can, now well into the 21st century, MANNipulate even raw data such that only a pittance even realize it might have ever even happened. It takes more than the attention span of a gnat for apparently even well-educated hominids to, at the very least, be aware of their perceptual efficiency.
Meaning that you indeed can, in supposedly modern times, grille-master the data as many times as can be slipped to (and by) the BBQ inclined. That is what makes all of this so interesting!
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, Tonto, cleverly disguised as an extreme weather event, gussies up some Sand(y) in your late-Holocene eyes. Being that was many months ago now, and not particularly enigmatic even at this ostensibly late extreme interglacial time, we are left to irrationally ponder, with the attention-span of a gnat:
“The largest boulder is about New South Wales, Australia (14,000 km away) to the Lanai 10 times the size of the largest Holocene ones moved by waves in wave event about 105,000 yr ago. Jones (1992), however, the area. Tsunamis are a reasonable possibility as a transporting disputed the Hawaiian source of the tsunami, citing problems mechanism of the Pleistocene boulders. However, if deposited in- with wave attenuation and evidence of uplift of the Hawaiian
stead by storms during the last interglaciation, the storms were of Islands to explain the Lanai deposits. In reply, Young and much greater intensity than those occurring in the region during Bryant (1992) appropriately noted that, despite some debate the late Holocene.”
— Hearty, 1997, Boulder Deposits from Large Waves during the Last Interglaciation on North Eleuthera Island, Bahamas, http://www.uow.edu.au/content/groups/public/@web/@sci/@eesc/documents/doc/uow014953.pdf
Which means, Houston, we might very well have, a not materialized yet, end-extreme interglacial problemo………….
But………but………., did you recently hear that Jimmy Fallon may succeed the late Holocene Jay Leno in the year of our most attuned mindset 2014?

March 3, 2013 6:14 pm

William McClenney says:
March 3, 2013 at 5:28 pm
William, you’re such a fool, your comment is twisted to the point of inaccuracy. why bother when skeptics have been insulted by so-called better people than you, yawn.

OssQss
March 3, 2013 6:27 pm

lsvalgaard says:
March 3, 2013 at 3:11 pm
Except that the long-term trend has been downward the past 6000 years.
—————————————————————————————————–
Even if so, his point was about retreating ice. .
An example>
http://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pr/ourlakes/background.html

March 3, 2013 6:37 pm

OssQss says:
March 3, 2013 at 6:27 pm
Even if so, his point was about retreating ice. .
Which stopped several thousand years ago. Since then the climate has steadily cooled.

March 3, 2013 6:45 pm

Sparks says:
March 3, 2013 at 6:14 pm
William McClenney says:
March 3, 2013 at 5:28 pm
Thanks. I appreciate the reference(s)……………..

OssQss
March 3, 2013 7:20 pm

lsvalgaard says:
March 3, 2013 at 6:37 pm
Which stopped several thousand years ago. Since then the climate has steadily cooled.
——————————————————————————————————————–
I certainly don’t disagree, but it depends upon the frame of reference in time, no?
Now, why have you not posted anything on the double dip solar item theory?
Cheers!

March 3, 2013 7:30 pm

William McClenney says:
March 3, 2013 at 6:45 pm
“I’m sarcastic look at me”
Be honest!

Scott Scarborough
March 3, 2013 7:34 pm

Yes,
it has been a downward trend from the Holocene Climate Optimum. Now I wonder why the climate scientists named it the Holocene Climate Optimum? They could have called it the Holocene Climate Bicycle… or the Holocene Climate Tragedy… or the Holocene Climate Catastrophe. It seems that they have changed their tune. I’m guessing for political purposes.

March 3, 2013 7:59 pm

If the climate cools, regardless of the carbon dioxide content, it is quick and painful, just like frostbite. when the climate warms, these are the good times. Co2 follows the good times.

OssQss
March 3, 2013 8:09 pm

March 3, 2013 8:10 pm

OssQss says:
March 3, 2013 at 7:20 pm
“Which stopped several thousand years ago. Since then the climate has steadily cooled.”
I certainly don’t disagree, but it depends upon the frame of reference in time, no?

No, time is time.
Now, why have you not posted anything on the double dip solar item theory?
If you refer to http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2013/01mar_twinpeaks/ then I have not commented because the story is not quite true [and is not all that important]. Cycle 14 had half a dozen peaks [not two] and cycle 24 will also have more peaks than two. I did publish a paper on double peaks http://www.leif.org/research/Asymmetric-Solar-Polar-Field-Reversals-talk.pdf with explanation of the slides here: http://www.leif.org/research/Talking_Points_for_Asymmetric_Reversals.pdf

March 3, 2013 8:14 pm

lsvalgaard says:
March 3, 2013 at 8:10 pm
I did publish a paper on double peaks. The published paper [in The Astrophysical Journal] is here
http://www.leif.org/research/ApJ88587.pdf

March 3, 2013 8:16 pm

Sparks says:
March 3, 2013 at 7:30 pm
William McClenney says:
March 3, 2013 at 6:45 pm
“I”m sarcastic look at me’
Be honest!”
Well, you know, when your worst-case 2007 AR4 by 2100 scenario traps below 10% of the last interglacial, there might be some actuarial interest.
Just sayin’
We will (or we won’t) have the 2nd post-MPT eccentricity minimum extended interglacial.
Which, more or less, depends on what you believe.
Sarcastic?
Not really.
But I am obviously interested in your take

March 3, 2013 8:26 pm

William McClenney says:
March 3, 2013 at 8:16 pm
Sweet! you’re in. If you are honest! you have my support.