A Preliminary Look at Compo et al (2013)

The recent paper Compo et al (2013) is titled Independent confirmation of global land warming without the use of station temperatures”. It’s in the preprint phase, and of course it’s paywalled. The abstract is here. It reads:

Confidence in estimates of anthropogenic climate change is limited by known issues with air temperature observations from land stations. Station siting, instrument changes, changing observing practices, urban effects, land cover, land use variations, and statistical processing have all been hypothesized as affecting the trends presented by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and others. Any artifacts in the observed decadal and centennial variations associated with these issues could have important consequences for scientific understanding and climate policy. We use a completely different approach to investigate global land warming over the 20th century. We have ignored all air temperature observations and instead inferred them from observations of barometric pressure, sea surface temperature, and sea-ice concentration using a physically-based data assimilation system called the 20th Century Reanalysis. This independent dataset reproduces both annual variations and centennial trends in the temperature datasets, demonstrating the robustness of previous conclusions regarding global warming.

In short, Compo et al (2013) recreated global land air surface temperatures without surface station-based temperature measurements. Basically, they used other variables as inputs to a computer reanalysis to infer the land surface air temperature anomalies.

Of course, SkepticalScience has already written a post about the paper, in which Dana1981 throws in his two cents about the significance of Compo et al (2013). SkepticalScience was kind enough to post Figures 1 and 2 from Compo et al (2013). The Compo et al Figure 1 is included here as Figure 1. It illustrates the warming of land surface air temperatures from 1901 to 2010 for the latitudes of 60S-90N. The blue curve is the Compo et al reanalysis. The red curve is the new and improved CRUTEM4 data from the UK Met Office. And the black curve is the average of other land surface air temperature reconstructions, including NCDC, GISS, JMA, and UDEL.

Figure 1 CompoFig1

Figure 1 (Figure 1 from Compo et al (2013))

What stands out for you in that graph?

For me, compared to the other datasets, the Compo at al reanalysis has warmer anomalies during the early-to-mid 1970s and cooler anomalies during the late 2000s, which would create a lower trend during the recent warming period. The Compo et al reanalysis also shows a flattening of land air surface temperature anomalies starting in 1995, where the other datasets show a continued warming. Compo at el also show an exaggerated spike in 1943 associated with the multiyear El Niño then. And Compo et al show a later start to the rise during the early warming period.

The choice of 1981-2010 as the base years for anomalies is also a curiosity. While the WMO recommends updating base years periodically, global temperature anomaly data producers such as GISS, NCDC and UKMO use their individually selected base periods.

REPLICATED COMPO ET AL REANALYSIS GRAPH

Using the coordinates function of MS Paint, I replicated the Compo at el (2013) reanalysis output. It’s compared to CRUTEM4 data for the latitudes of 60S-90N in Figure 2, using the base years of 1981-2010. (The CRUTEM4 data is available through the KNMI Climate Explorer on a gridded basis.) I’ve also included the linear trends. My replica produces a linear trend that’s comparable to the 0.09 deg C/decade trend noted in the SkepticalScience post.

Figure 2

Figure 2

So let’s take a closer look at the recent warming period, and we’ll start the recent warming period in 1976. Figure 3 compares the replicated Compo et al reanalysis to CRUTEM4 data for the shorter term. As suspected, the CRUTEM4 data shows a 32% higher warming trend than the Compo et al reconstruction. The flattening of the warm peaks in the Compo et al reanalysis since 1995 is also much clearer.

Figure 3

Figure 3

USING DIFFERENT BASE YEARS

In Figures 4 and 5, long-term comparisons, I’ve compared the CRUTEM4 and Compo reanalysis using the standard UKMO and GISS base years. Figure 4 shows the UKMO base years of 1961-1990 and Figure 5 shows the GISS base years of 1951-1980. The recent divergence (flattening of the warm peaks in the Compo et al reanalysis versus the continued warming of the CRUTEM4 data peaks) stands out quite clearly in both illustrations. I’ll let you comment on why Compo et al (2013) presented the anomalies using the base years of 1981-2010.

Figure 4

Figure 4

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Figure 5

Figure 5

TREND MAPS

My Figure 6 is Figure 2 from Compo et al (2013). Note the differences in trends over Alaska and the mid-to-high latitudes of Russia for the period of 1952-2010 (Cells c and d). Compo et al (2013) could not reproduce the excessive rates of warming there during that period.

Figure 6 CompoFig2

Figure 6 (Figure 2 from Compo et al (2013))

CLOSING

Sometimes I get the impression SkepticalScience is unable to read time-series graphs. I’ll let you comment on the rest of the SkepticalScience post.

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questing vole
April 9, 2013 1:41 am

Readers mystified by the references to Compo, Clegg and Nora Batty may look away now, but I recall a moment in an early script that might appeal.
As I remember, Compo was philosophising in his inimitable way about the wonders of the universe and remarked that when he was in the queue at the chip shop he sometimes stood between the mirror on the customers’ side of the counter and the one above the fryers, from where he could see his reflection and his reflection’s reflection and his reflection’s reflection’s reflection and so on to infinity, but that even so, he knew that he wasn’t somewhere in that infinity because he was actually still in the chip shop.
Some LOTSW geek out there might recognise the episode.

Mike Ozanne
April 9, 2013 3:26 am

So we have:
One set of temperature data from a metrology system that has not had its reproducibility and repeatability managed (” 70% of the USHCN temperature
25 stations are ranked CRN classification 4 or 5, with nominal temperature uncertainties up
26 to 2C or 5C, respectively” see http://berkeleyearth.org/pdf/station-quality-may-20.pdf)
A second series of proxy measurements from metrology systems that haven’t had their reproducibility and repeatability managed, and which are susceptible to other factors than land temperature.(http://climateaudit.org/2007/03/17/buckets-and-engines/,http://climateaudit.org/2005/06/19/19th-century-sst-adjustments/,http://climateaudit.org/2005/06/24/sst-adjustment-2/)
A declaration that set 2 is independent confirmation of set 1 based on a computer simulation.
Shouldn’t this paper have Dr Sheldon Cooper cited as a co-author so that the whole sorry circle jerk could be concluded with a swift snappy BAZINGA..!!!

April 9, 2013 6:09 am

Rick Powell wrote:
April 8, 2013 at 12:48 pm

Correct me if I’m wrong, but there are error bars on that first graph. That’s what the light blue envelope is, right?

You may be correct.
1/ So the original authors are claiming that one can determine what the “global temperature” was in 1900 to better than +/- 0.3C from proxy data? This not only strains credulity, but tosses it in the blender.
2/ The subsequent linear regression analysis quotes slopes to 3 significant figures, but does not quote any associated error/uncertainty, so one can’t conclude if the differences are meaningful or not.

Ryan
April 9, 2013 7:10 am

As far as I can see all these graphs show the same thing: For 40 of the last 70 years since global CO2 production has seen a significant increase, temperatures haven’t bothered to rise. In other words there is no obvious correlation between temperature and CO2 increase.

Master_Of_Puppets
April 9, 2013 7:48 am

At EGU, and attended the presentation this morning, Vienna. Not impressed at all. The presenter first stated he would ‘ignore’ all TL(2m) and replicate global land temperatures using ocean reanalysis with a matrix formulation and sea level pressure term. He then showed the graphs, with R-squared, 0.90, then claimed he replicated the “instrumental” TL(2m) and proved the IPCC AR4 land temperature datasets were robust and correct.
Oh dear. Seemed like a children’s magic show with Mr. Magician, a wand, a Top Hat, a cape, and then the rabbit (“IPCC AR4 land temperature datasets are robust and correct”).

AndyG55
April 10, 2013 2:59 am

The very fact that it matches reasonably well to CruTemp, proves that it is a load of manipulated hogwash !!

richard verney
April 10, 2013 9:01 am

oldseadog says:
April 8, 2013 at 1:15 pm
/////////////////////////////////////
I frequently note that ship’s figures are based upon the water inlet manifold temp and that the water intake is frquently drawn at 6 to 10 metres below the surface (depending on the design and the configuration of the vessel).
It is important to note that sea surface temperatures will therefore be warmer than that indicated by ship’s data on sea temps. Most people fail to appreciate that ship’s data reads cooler than SST since it is not SST but rather the sea temperature at depth (say 6 to 10m below surface).
Further, I seem to recall that the latest Hadcrut figures adjust the ship’s data downwards. When if they really want to make a meaningful comparison with satelitte sea surface temperatures, they should be adjusting the ship’s temps upwards,

rob conway
April 13, 2013 12:45 pm

This reconstruction changes little when viewing the running mean for the two uptick periods of ~1910-1940 and 1975-2000, and as pointed out, this new reconstruction plots a flatter climb during the 1975-2000 period. The datasets still indicate a relative equal amount of change both prior to and after accelerated CO2 use (~+0.56 C). The natural variations in the geologic proxy data have much greater short and long term variations than the two recent 20th century warming periods.