Stalking the Rogue Hotspot

[I’m making this excellent essay a top sticky post for a day or two, I urge sharing it far and wide. New stories will appear below this one.  – Anthony]

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Dr. Kevin Trenberth is a mainstream climate scientist, best known for inadvertently telling the world the truth about the parlous state of climate science itself. In the Climategate emails published in 2009, it was revealed that in private he had said:

The fact is that we can’t account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can’t.

This from a spokesman for the folks who have been telling us for years that the science is settled …  

However, the problem seems to be solved. Kevin Trenberth, Distinguished Senior Scientist, (as he is described on his web page) has emailed Joe Romm, Distinguished Senior Climate Alarmist, about the status of Dr. Trenberth’s tireless quest to find the missing heat, stating (emphasis in Romm’s post):

dr. kevin trenberthWe can confidently say that the risk of drought and heat waves has gone up and the odds of a hot spot somewhere on the planet have increased but the hotspot moves around and the location is not very predictable. This year perhaps it is East Asia: China, or earlier Siberia? It has been much wetter and cooler in the US (except for SW), whereas last year the hot spot was the US. Earlier this year it was Australia (Tasmania etc) in January (southern summer). We can name spots for all summers going back quite a few years: Australia in 2009, the Russian heat wave in 2010, Texas in 2011, etc.”

I’ll return to the serious question of Dr. Trenberth’s missing heat in a moment. But first, let’s consider Dr. Trenberth’ statement, starting with the section highlighted in bold in Joe’s post, viz:

“We can confidently say that the risk of drought and heat waves has gone up and the odds of a hot spot somewhere on the planet have increased but the hotspot moves around and the location is not very predictable.”

That single sentence contains all the required elements of a good novel—unpredictability, increasing risks, a dangerous moving “hotspot”, confident experts, a planet in peril … all the stuff that goes into an exciting story, it’s perfect for a direct-to-DVD movie.

The only problem with Dr. Trenberth’s statement is that like all novels, it’s fiction. To start with, Dr. Trenberth is very careful not to claim that droughts and heat waves and “hotspots” have actually increased. Did you notice that? You need to watch statements about climate very closely. He didn’t say that the number of droughts or heat waves have gone up. That’s a falsifiable statement, and one which is decidedly not true, so he prudently avoided that pitfall. The IPCC itself has said that we have no evidence of any increases in drought, in heat waves, or in any other climate extremes, despite a couple of centuries involving a couple of degrees of warming. But then, Dr. Trenberth didn’t say droughts or heat waves have gone up, did he?

He said the risk of droughts and heat waves has gone up. He said theodds of a hot spot somewhere on the planet” have gone up. Presumably, this deep knowledge of the probability of future climate catastrophes has been vouchsafed to Dr. Trenberth by means of the climate models … the same climate models that are part of the “travesty” because they can’t account for the missing heat. He’s citing risks and odds based on climate models that were unable to forecast the current hiatus in warming which has gone on for fifteen years or so now, despite continuing increases in CO2 and methane and black carbon and the like …

The part that I particularly enjoyed is the foreboding, menacing quality of his claim that there is now some roving “hotspot”, whose location “moves around” and “is not very predictable”. Dang, what if the dreaded “hotspot” comes to my town? Does he mean we might be faced with the much-feared phenomenon known locally as “a really hot summer”. We know those summers, when  bad things happen, like the time when Jimmy Fugate punched out the eleventh guy, by Jimmy’s actual count, who had said “Hot enough for ya?” to him on that fateful August day … but although I digress, we know the danger is real, because as Dr. Trenberth warns us, the hot spot is on the move, viz:

It has been much wetter and cooler in the US (except for SW), whereas last year the hot spot was the US. Earlier this year it was Australia (Tasmania etc) in January (southern summer). We can name [hot]spots for all summers going back quite a few years …

I gotta admit, this is stunning news. Dr. Trenberth is giving us inside climate information, full of extra scientificity, that every summer some places are extra-hot, while you’d be amazed to find out, other locations have extra-cool summers. We’re in one of the latter where I live. Around here, this has been one of the coolest summers in recent years.

So following in Dr. Trenberth’s trail-blazing footsteps, here’s my new climate theory. It revolves around the dreaded “coldspot”. You may be shocked when I tell you that every summer there’s a “coldspot” somewhere in the world, a place where the summer is much colder than usual. Last year the coldspot was Russia. This year it has moved to Northern California where I live. Here’s what makes coldspots so dangerous, as highlighted by Dr. Trenberth. The coldspot “moves around and the location is not very predictable” … so you should be very afraid, because science.

I mean … are we supposed to take this talk of “moving hotspots” seriously? Is this how desperate the alarmists are  getting?

Joe Romm’s quote of Dr. Trenberth closes with this suitably ominous line, which I assume is preparing us for the sequel …

Similarly with risk of high rains and floods: They are occurring but the location moves.

Ahhh, Dr. Trenberth is referring to the dreaded “wetspot”, and he doesn’t mean the one the baby leaves on your shoulder. Did you know that every year during the rainy season there’s a “wetspot” somewhere in the world, a place where it rains more than usual? And did you know the wetspot moves around the world and the location is not very predictable? There’s no end to the insights available in Dr. Trenberth’s concepts …

I have to say, I find Dr. Trenberth’s claims both very depressing and very encouraging. They’re depressing because they are a million miles from science. It’s just a frightening tale for children around the campfire, about how the risks of bad things are rising, and it’s worse than we thought.

But it’s encouraging, because when the intellectual leaders of the climate alarmism movement sink to peddling those kinds of scare stories, it’s a clear indication that they’re way short of actual scientific arguments to back up their inchoate fears of Thermageddon.

In any case, let me move on to the more serious topic I mentioned above, regarding Dr. Trenberth’s infamous “missing heat”. Let me suggest where some of it is going. It’s going back out to space.

One of the main thermal controls on the planet’s heat balance is the relationship between surface temperature on one hand, and the time of day of cumulus and cumulonimbus formation in the tropics. On days when the surface is warmer, clouds form earlier in the day. The opposite is true when the surface is cooler, clouds form later. This control operates on an hourly basis. I’ve shown how this affects the daily evolution of tropical temperature here and here using the TAO moored buoy data. Here’s a bit of what I demonstrated in those posts. Figure 2, from the second citation, shows how cold mornings and warm mornings affect the evolution of the temperature of the ensuing day.

tao triton all buoys warm cold

Figure 2. Average of all TAO buoy records (heavy black line), as well as averages of the same data divided into days when dawn is warmer than average (heavy red line), and days when dawn is cooler than average (heavy blue line) for each buoy. Light straight lines show the difference between the previous and the following 1:00 AM temperatures.

The control of the surface temperature is exerted in two main ways: 1) in the morning, cumulus cloud formation reduces incoming solar radiation by reflecting it back to space, and 2) in the afternoon, thunderstorms both increase cloud coverage and remove energy from the surface and transport it to the upper troposphere. We can see both of these going on in the average temperatures above.

The black line in Figure 2 shows the average day’s cycle. The onset of cumulus is complete by about 10:00. The afternoon is warmer than the morning. As you would expect with an average, the 1 AM temperatures are equal (thin black line).

The days when the dawn is warmer than average for each buoy (red line) show a different pattern. There is less cooling from 1AM to dawn. Cumulus development is stronger when it occurs, driving the temperature down further than on average. In addition, afternoon thunderstorms not only keep the afternoon temperatures down, they also drive evening and night cooling. As a result, when the day is warmer at dawn, the following morning is cooler.

In general, the reverse occurs on the cooler days (blue line). Cooling from 1 AM until dawn is strong. Warming is equally strong. Morning cumulus formation is weak, as is the afternoon thunderstorm foundation. As a result, when the dawn is cooler, temperatures continue to climb during the day, and the following 1AM is warmer than the preceding 1 AM.

Regarding the reduction in incoming solar energy, in a succeeding post called “Cloud Radiation Forcing in the TAO Dataset“, I provided measurements of the difference between the shortwave and longwave radiation effects of tropical clouds, based on the same TAO buoy data. The measurements showed that around noon, when cumulus usually form, the net effect of cloud cover (longwave minus shortwave) was a reduction of half a kilowatt per square metre in net downwelling radiative energy.

In addition to that reduction in downwelling radiation, there is another longer-term effect. This is that we lose not only the direct energy of the solar radiation, but also the subsequent “greenhouse radiation” resulting from the solar radiation. In the TAO buoy dataset, the 24/7 average downwelling solar radiation reaching the surface is about 250 W/m2. Via the poorly-named “greenhouse effect” this results in a 24/7 average downwelling longwave radiation of about 420 w/m2. So for every ten W/m2 of solar we lose through reflection to space, we also lose an additional seventeen W/m2 of the resulting longwave radiation.

This means that if the tropical clouds form one hour earlier or later on average, that reduces or increases net downwelling radiation by about 50 W/m2 on a 24/7 basis. This 100 W/m2 swing in incoming energy, based solely on a ± one-hour variation in tropical cloud onset time, exercises a very strong daily control on the total amount of energy entering the planetary system. This is because most of the sun’s energy enters the climate system in the tropics. As one example, if the tropical clouds form on average at five minutes before eleven AM instead of right at eleven AM, that is a swing of 4 W/m2 on a 24/7 basis, enough to offset the tropical effects of a doubling of CO2 …

Not only that, but the control system is virtually invisible, in that there are few long-term minute-by-minute records of daily cloud onset times. Who would notice a change of half an hour in the average time of cumulus formation? It is only the advent of modern nearly constant recording of variables like downwelling long and shortwave radiation that has let me demonstrate the effect of the cloud onset on tropical temperatures using the TAO buoy dataset.

While writing this here on a cold and foggy night, I realized that I had the data to add greatly to my understanding of this question. Remember that I have made a curious claim. This is that in the tropics, as the day gets warmer, the albedo increases. This means that we should find the same thing on a monthly basis—warmer months should result in a greater albedo, there should be a positive correlation between temperature and albedo. This is in contrast to our usual concept of albedo. We usually think of causation going the other way, of increasing albedo causing a decrease in temperature. This is the basis of the feedback from reduced snow and ice. The warmer it gets, the less the snow and ice albedo. This is a negative correlation between albedo and temperature, albedo going down with increasing temperature. So my theory was that unlike at the poles, in the tropics the albedo should be positively correlated with the temperature. However, I’d never thought of a way to actually demonstrate the strength of that relationship at a global level.

So I took a break from writing to look at the correlation of surface temperature and albedo in the CERES satellite dataset. Here’s that result, hot off of the presses this very evening, science at its most raw:

correlation between albedo and temperatureFigure 3. Correlation between albedo and temperature, as shown by the CERES dataset. Underlying data sources and discussion are here.

Gotta confess, I do love results like that. That is a complete confirmation of my claim that in the tropics, as the temperature increases, the albedo increases. Lots of interesting detail there as well … fascinating.

My conclusion is that Dr. Trenberth’s infamous “missing heat” is missing because it never entered the system. It was reflected away by a slight increase in the average albedo, likely caused by a slight change in the cloud onset time or thickness.

My regards to everyone,

w.

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August 22, 2013 6:40 pm

Hey Miss Pamela, how you doin’??
Steamboat Jack (Jon Jewett’s evil twin)

Bennett In Vermont
August 22, 2013 6:59 pm

MikeL at 12:39 pm:
Beautiful analogy. Me too!

Jon
August 22, 2013 7:25 pm

Blocking high pressure leads to warm and dry weather in the summer and cold and dry weather in the winter. Outside the high pressure you will find the low pressure stacking up giving others wet and cool weather in the summer and wet and mild weather in the winter.
So the claim is that humans are to be blamed for changing the jetstreams and blocking high pressures?

george h
August 22, 2013 7:30 pm

A most amusing and perplexing problem, this moving, elusive hotspot; like a phantom whose whereabouts are forever hidden from all but the most discerning among us, the climate investigators. Sounds like a job for Holmes and Watson. What do you think? Maybe they can help Trenberth in his quest.

John Phillips
August 22, 2013 8:03 pm

I’ve noticed there are more and more places that are not hot spots or cold spots. This is the most alarming trend. We are seeing more and more mediocre spots. What’s worse is that those spots move around a lot even though they are becoming more numerous. And then there is this tendency for mediocre spots to change to either cold or hot spots intermittently. Its devastating. The end of the world is nigh. Prepare to meet thy doom,

Bob Highland
August 22, 2013 8:04 pm

NEWSFLASH – Boulder, CO
By Hugh Gottaby-Jokin
Before a hushed audience of admiring Green persons, Dr Kevin Trenberth of NCAR has announced a startling discovery.
‘As a result of many years of intensive and expensive research by some of the finest minds in climatology, including my own of course, we have found evidence of a new phenomenon previously unknown to climate science, and we have decided to call it “WEATHER”.
‘Whereas we had clearly established – by innumerable computer models and a certain Siberian tree – that climate in every location around the world had been ideal and unchanging up until about 1950, when mankind’s fearsome depredations began to screw things up for Gaia and her pet polar bears, new information has come to light that casts uncertainty on this conclusion.
‘It now appears that occasionally there may be variations from these established ideals, whereby, often for days at a time, various places get hotter than they are supposed to, or colder than they are supposed to, or wetter, or drier, or windier, or cloudier.’
(Mr Trenberth is forced to pause at this point to allow his audience to shriek and wail their disbelief, with much gnashing of teeth and rending of woven organic hairshirts.)
‘Frankly, it’s chaos out there,’ he continued, an obvious tear glistening in the corner of one eye. ‘This weather thing is a moving target. Last year, we organised a 50-man expedition to one of the hotspots, but when we got there a week later, it was snowing.
‘The good news is, we have received word of a certain butterfly in the Amazon. Apparently, every time it flaps its wings it causes an effect that ripples through Earth’s entire climate system and messes everything up. So, me and a bunch of guys are going to go down there and nail the ba***rd, because it’s a travesty.’
Donations may be sent to Dr Trenberth, ex-Vice-President Gore, or the tree-hugging, people-hating organisation of your choice.

Jon
August 22, 2013 8:13 pm

I remember some years ago reading about a mega hotspot over Central Europe about 500 years ago. The river Rhein dried up. Maybe one of the reasons they started burning people at that time? And after burning enough the rain came?

DR
August 22, 2013 8:20 pm
JimF
August 22, 2013 8:27 pm

Aristotle would be proud. We have reduced “climate science” to “hot spots”, “cold spots”, “wet spots” and “dry spots” that move according to the dictates of Olympus; that is, erratically and unpredictably. When can we put these people in jail? Or at least fire them with cause, so that they don’t earn their future incomes from taxpayers?

DR
August 22, 2013 8:27 pm

And who can forget this?

Bart
August 22, 2013 8:29 pm

FTA: “The coldspot “moves around and the location is not very predictable” … so you should be very afraid, because science.”
This is a riot. I laughed ’til my sides ached.

Jon
August 22, 2013 9:01 pm

Another ManBearPig. Half Man, half Bear and half pig?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ManBearPig

Girma
August 22, 2013 9:03 pm

as the temperature increases, the albedo increases.
Excellent essay.
Thanks Willis.

August 22, 2013 9:18 pm

Hot spots are random, but cold spots are predictable. All you need is a copy of Gore’s travel itinerary.
Those of you familiar with the comic strip Lil Abner may remember a character named Joe Btfsplk who always had a dark cloud over his head. I imagine Gore walking around with a cloud snowing over his.
Could Trenberth be setting himself up for a research grant to find a spot remover? Maybe Josh could create a spotoon of this.
Frankly, though, I don’t think Terberth’s latest ideas are worth a bucket of warm spots. Just one more spot on his record.

Jumbofoot
August 22, 2013 10:37 pm

Tremendous post Mr. Eschenbach! Elegant. Hilarious. As for Trenberth and his peers… it would seem their problems have more to do with Blind Spots.

JimF
August 22, 2013 11:29 pm

Willis: I quickly looked at your link regarding the CERES data, read a bit, and then ask this question (presently after some explanation). I love your tropical thermostat hypothesis, and now, your concept of waxing/waning albedo. Now the question: In El Nino – hot water across the breadth of the equatorial Pacific, albedo should be really high in the equatorial band. In La Nina – cold water exposed as hot, less dense water is blown to the west and piled up – albedo should be relatively low so that lots of solar energy is being absorbed by the equatorial ocean. Do the data show any such fluctuation? I know they don’t cover many years.

tonyb
Editor
August 23, 2013 1:06 am

Willis
Nice article. We have had a whole generation of climate scientists in thrall to their higher profile peers and afraid to say about such key pieces of the AGW narrative as the Hockey Stick ‘Tree rings as thermometers DR Mann how does that work then? (similarly with Trenberths moving hot spot) That deferential silence can be summed up by this Moroccan proverb
“ if at noon he says it is night, will you say; behold, the stars?”
Add in the vested interests of politicians, NGO’s and green campaigners who seem to adhere to this saying;
“The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.
H. L. Mencken
And we have an explanation for the bizarre nature of post normal climate science where up is down and down is up
tonyb

Duster
August 23, 2013 1:12 am

I have always thought that the real telling phrase in that CG email from Trenberth was not the “travesty” bit, though that’s worth consideration. No, it is his flat assertion that “… but the data are surely wrong….” just few words later. This unbridled confidence (faith) in theory is what separates him from good science. He can’t consider that the theory may be wrong. So, it must be the data. NOAA data adjustments follow this identical pattern. They HAVE to be systematically wrong which permits systematic “adjustments.”

tobias
August 23, 2013 1:40 am

Thanks to all of the comments I have not laughed this hard after reading some of the comments. At my age having a “wet” spot will make my nurse happy.

Jon
August 23, 2013 2:18 am

“Thanks, David. I have great respect for Dr. Roy. However, what I have shown is increasing clouds with warming in the tropics
He says that even climate models with decreasing clouds with warming will show increasing clouds with warming … I fear that makes no sense to me at all.”
I agree when talking about tropics over sea. But it might also be applicable over tropic rainforrests

August 23, 2013 2:18 am

Reblogged this on luvsiesous and commented:
Friends,
I read WattsUpWithThat on a regular basis.
They dispel the bad science around global warming, I mean climate change, I mean the missing ozone layer.
I do not remember what they called it before that.
But, this blog entry looks at the rhetoric, the language used, by these so called climatologists.
Have we been warming? Yes, since the last ice age. And we have warmed a lot. But, I really doubt CO2 from my car had anything to do with the ice age ending.
Do you agree or disagree?
Wayne
PS either way, enjoy reading Watts.

Brian H
August 23, 2013 2:26 am

Yeah, a change of half a kW/m^2 will do that. That’s one almighty hefty control knob!