This is one of those publications where I look at what was done in the paper and just shake my head in disbelief. For starters, according to the data listed in the SI, the supposed extra deaths due to climate change manifesting itself as increased summer temperatures came from model output; they didn’t actually have health services data/coroner data that showed causes of death. They simply assume the model output is valid. And there are other problems, such as their choice of temperature base period of 1900-1929 to compare against the study period of 1980-2009. See more at the end of the post, I need some reader assistance – Anthony
Press Release from Umeå University
Climate change increased the number of deaths
[2013-10-21] The increased temperatures caused by ongoing climate change in Stockholm, Sweden between 1980 and 2009 caused 300 more premature deaths than if the temperature increase did not take place. In Sweden as a whole, it would mean about 1,500 more premature deaths, according to a study from researchers at Umeå University published in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Global warming does not only give a general increase in temperature, but it also increases the frequency, intensity and duration of heat waves. Previous studies have shown that these changes are associated with increased mortality, especially during extremely hot periods. It also speculated that mortality associated with extreme cold could decrease as a result of a warmer climate.
Researchers at the Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umeå University, conducted a study in which they examined the extent to which mortality associated with extreme temperatures occurred in Stockholm during the period 1980-2009. In order to assess what can be regarded as extreme temperatures, they compared temperature data from this period with the corresponding data for the period 1900 to 1929.
The study shows that the number of periods of extremely high temperatures increased significantly over the period 1980-2009, all of which contributed to about 300 more deaths during these heat waves than had been the case without climate change.
“Mortality associated with extreme heat during the relevant period was doubled, compared to if we had not had some climate change,” says Daniel Oudin Åström, PhD-student in Occupational and Environmental Medicine, who conducted the study. “Furthermore, we saw that even though the winters have become milder, extremely cold periods occurred more often, which also contributed to a small increase in mortality during the winter.”
Although the increase in the number of deaths due to extreme temperature overall is quite small over a 30 year period, Daniel Oudin Åström emphasises that the current study only includes the Stockholm area. If the method had been used in the whole of Sweden, or Europe, the increase in the number of deaths would have been much larger. For Sweden as a whole, it is estimated that about 1,500 extra deaths due to climate change had occurred over the past 30 years.
In addition, the researchers only examined mortality in really extreme temperatures. Therefore, the number of premature deaths caused by less extreme temperatures is not included in the study.
Daniel Oudin Åström says that despite the long-standing debate about climate change, Swedes have not changed their attitude and willingness to protect themselves against extreme temperatures.
“The study findings do not suggest any adaptation of the Swedes when it comes to confronting the increasingly warmer climate, such as increased use of air conditioning in elderly housing,” says Daniel Oudin Åström. “It is probably because there is relatively little knowledge in regards to increased temperatures and heat waves on health.”
###
Here is the paper:
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nclimate2022.html
Attributing mortality from extreme temperatures to climate change in Stockholm, Sweden
Daniel Oudin Åström, Bertil Forsberg, Kristie L. Ebi & Joacim Rocklöv
Nature Climate Change (2013) doi:10.1038/nclimate2022
Abstract:
A changing climate is increasing the frequency, intensity, duration and spatial extent of heat waves. These changes are associated with increased human mortality during heat extremes. At the other end of the temperature scale, it has been widely speculated that cold-related mortality could decrease in a warmer world. We aim to answer a key question; the extent to which mortality due to temperature extremes in Stockholm, Sweden during 1980–2009 can be attributed to climate change that has occurred since our reference period (1900–1929). Mortality from heat extremes in 1980–2009 was double what would have occurred without climate change. Although temperature shifted towards warmer temperatures in the winter season, cold extremes occurred more frequently, contributing to a small increase of mortality during the winter months. No evidence was found for adaptation over 1980–2009
===============================================================
More than a couple of things stand out that I’m looking into.
1. A paper they cite by Pat Michaels and Chipp Knappenberger found only one US city that had any mortality increase due to heat, and that was Seattle. Michaels opines that this was likely due to the city being such a cool climate that very little cooling infrastructure was in place in the city. This might also be true of the high latitude city of Stockholm.
2. A cursory check of climate data for Stockholm from NASA GISS shows that something curious happened around 1930. Notice the big step change then:
Source: http://data.giss.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/gistemp/show_station.cgi?id=645024640000&dt=1&ds=12
Note also how much more variance there is after 1930. To me this looks like a classic station move signal, though it could be related to something as simple as a building going up/torn down nearby that affected wind patterns near the station. The fact that they use 1900-1929 as the base period for the model comparison is troubling, since it seems to be the coolest, least variable part of the station record.
Also, for some reason, GISS can’t seem to get data updated for Stockholm past 1994, even though the station continues to produce data. I’ve asked Dr. Gavin Schmidt about this, but he has ignored my request. Perhaps he’s too busy on Twitter to bother.
Waymarking notes of the station:
“When the observatory was renovated and extended in 1875 the thermometer was moved to a metal cage outside a window on the first floor. The current observation site, from 1960, is only about 10 metres away. These few small relocations make Stockholm’s long observation series one of the world’s absolute best. The high quality of the series has recently been documented in several scientific studies.”*
*From Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute SMHI website.
With it being supposedly “…one of the world’s absolute best.” you’d think NASA GISS would want to get current data for it. It’s a travesty they have not updated it since 1994:
Source: http://data.giss.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/gistemp/find_station.cgi?dt=1&ds=12&name=stockholm
3. The authors cite the shift in temperature distribution during summer as being proof of more heat which would translate into greater mortality(see figure 2 below).
Figure 2: Temperature distribution of 2-day moving average of mean temperatures during summer months.

Grey distribution, 1900–1929; black distribution, 1980–2009.
Problem is, this data they are plugging into their mortality model appears to come from a single weather station, what I believe is the Stockholm Observatory, though they don’t actually name the station dataset in the paper that I’ve found. The Stockholm Observatory has all sorts of microsite issues that they have not accounted for, such as a brick building nearby and wind shading from rows of vegetation.
Image from Waymarking.com, taken July 30th, 2010 – more here
Here is the aerial view from Google Earth using the lat/lon provided by Waymarking.com You can see how wind sheltered the station is, especially during summer with all those broadleaf trees around it. One wonders what the site looked like in 1929 and if the weather station was in the same location.
The microsite issues coupled with whatever happened in 1930 (which looks like a station move to me) could easily explain a good portion of summer month temperature increases from 1980-2009 compared to 1900-1929
4. There’s other cherry picking going on; they cite Stockholm as being representative of the changes in Sweden, yet study no other cities or stations to test that theory. They are using mean temperatures, rather than looking at Tmax. Mean temperatures are sensitive to effects of microsite bias which mostly show up in Tmin. If heat waves are really increasing in Stockholm, affecting mortality, it should show up in Tmax, yet they didn’t test for this that I can find.
I think this paper is seriously flawed because the authors assume the temperature data is “near perfect” and chose an inappropriate base period which exacerbates the comparison differential. Whether this is incompetence or cherry picking remains to be seen.
I’m working on locating metadata for a detailed history of the station in Stockholm to test out what I have observed, but I need help.
Anyone reading who is familiar with the station and the meteorological service there, I ask that you weigh in with a comment below. I need the help since I’m not well versed in Swedish. Any help will be appreciated.
Related articles
- Stockholm heat toll ‘doubled in 30 years’ (climatenewsnetwork.net)
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And the “longer” scientific version
http://www.homogenisation.org/files/private/WG1/Bibliography/Applications/Applications%20(A-B)/BERGSTROM_and_MOBERG_2002.pdf
[/sarc]
I was gonna mention tampering of Stockholm data by GISS as well. Use the raw data instead. Meanwhile..
[sarc]
We’re DOOMED!! I did some really sloppy programming and it says we’re all gonna die in goalpost-moved 30-something hours, days, years.. something!
Maybe Hansen, Mann or Santer hacked my ‘puter. But I doubt I got the instructions wrong. In any case, I won’t share the data. Go away!
[/sarc]
The very second paragraph
Quote
Global warming does not only give a general increase in temperature, but it also increases the frequency, intensity and duration of heat waves. Previous studies have shown that these changes are associated with increased mortality, especially during extremely hot periods. It also speculated that mortality associated with extreme cold could decrease as a result of a warmer climate.
Unquote
The built in bias is immediately obvious. “It also increases” and “increased mortality” during hot periods. compare with ” It is speculated” and “extreme cold could”.
That single paragraph just sums it all up.
biased rubbish
Sorry researchers – numbers are not good enough! I want names. They need to provide the names of the 300 who died otherwise they just made this up.
What they appear to think is an unbearably “hot” day, 25 C (or 77 F) is where I keep my air conditioner set during the Texas summers. And then I keep my heat set at 23 C during the winters! (I don’t like a real big range inside my house)
Amazing I’m still alive, I suppose. I wonder if they could even fathom why I would never want to live any farther north than I do right now.
Looking at the 2 day temperature distribution, at no time did the temperatures exceed 25C. Temperatures below 28C are fatal to unprotected humans. They cannot eat enough food to maintain body temperature and die from exposure.
Normal body temperature is 37C. The only way temperatures as low as Stockholm could actually kill anyone is by cooling, or by faulty models.
When we look at the top 50 causes of death in Sweden, the only heat related cause is fire. Surely Climate Change is not causing buildings to burst into flames.
Influenza & Pneumonia is number 8, which is definitely associated more with cold weather than hot. Dementia is number 3 which may help explain this latest paper.
1 Coronary Heart Disease
2 Stroke
3 Alzheimers/Dementia
4 Lung Cancers
5 Colon-Rectum Cancers
6 Prostate Cancer
7 Lung Disease
8 Influenza & Pneumonia
9 Diabetes Mellitus
10 Breast Cancer
11 Pancreas Cancer
12 Other Injuries
13 Hypertension
14 Suicide
15 Lymphomas
16 Falls
17 Other Neoplasms
18 Kidney Disease
19 Leukemia
20 Stomach Cancer
21 Bladder Cancer
22 Liver Disease
23 Skin Cancers
24 Ovary Cancer
25 Liver Cancer
26 Endocrine Disorders
27 Inflammatory/Heart
28 Parkinson Disease
29 Road Traffic Accidents
30 Oesophagus Cancer
31 Peptic Ulcer Disease
32 Oral Cancer
33 Poisonings
34 Uterin Cancer
35 Alcohol
36 Congenital Anomalies
37 Cervical Cancer
38 Anaemia
39 Skin Disease
40 Multiple Sclerosis
41 Rheumatic Heart Disease
42 Asthma
43 Rheumatoid Arthritis
44 Diarrhoeal diseases
45 Drownings
46 Drug Use
47 Epilepsy
48 Fires
49 Violence
50 Depression
In school I was taught the difference between correlation and causation with aa classic example that involved violent crime rates in the summer versus the winter. Summertime rates are much higher than wintertime rate. One, at first glance, may be led to believe that the warm weather makes people more violent. However the real explanation was one of availability: there are more public crowds in warmer weather than colder weather and just the increased contact time between strangers accounted for the higher rates of violent crime.
So did these jokers control for the types of deaths ? Are they all from heat stroke? Or are some deaths from accidents, murder, etc. which simply could mean that when it’s warm people are “out and about” more.
There are numerous studies documenting “premature” or “excess” death due to COLD more than heat.
Climate Change Reconsidered Interim Report 2011 Ch 9 Human Health Effects reviews 9.1 Temperature Related Human Mortality
An international team studying 15 European cities
Climate Change Reconsidered 2013 section 7.1.5 reviews Cold Weather Extremes
Multiple deprivation and excess winter deaths in Scotland
Contrast the far higher cost of cooking on biomass in developing countries:
Public health benefits of strategies to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions: household energy Wilkinson et al. November 25, 2009 DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61713-X
Review the Copenhagen Consensus which addresses ALL the major humanitarian projects and ranks them according to the greatest benefits to costs.
The astronomers moved from the old observatory to the new one in 1929-30. The old observatory was transfered to the city and the area made in to a public park. The geographical institute moved in to the buildings 1934. It is now a museum. I suspect the astronomers brought the station with them. They did so in Oslo when they moved about the same time.
The observatory history in swedish:
http://www.observatoriet.kva.se/museet/Var-historia/
Descartes died from a cold caught after grueling, infamous 5 a.m. philosophy sessions with Cartesian Christina, in the cold of her Swedish castle.
Nine pensioners died from cold EVERY HOUR last winter as bill prices soar
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1332343/Nine-pensioners-died-cold-hour-winter-prices-soar.html
Two hundred people, most of them elderly, will die in Britain of cold-related diseases every day this winter
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2011/oct/22/older-people-cold-energy-bills
In the UK we are a bit more worried about the cold.
The Conservative government, whose colours are Blue, had an election slogan:
“Vote Blue; go Green!”
As we run into winter, it is now looking increasingly like:
“Vote Green, go blue…”
Swedes are famous for boiling themselves in saunas and then jumping through holes in ice-covered lakes to cool off. Just wondering if the model factored in what appears to be a genetic tolerance to temperature extremes.
(half /sarc)
The first whiff that indicates this paper came from one of the crocks of sh*t Mann and pals are busy filling is the lack of any evidence at all that the temperatures experienced during a summer in Stockholm can be bad for one’s health. The second whiff showing this is a paper that was used to clean up after filling a crock of sh*t is that they cannot offer any evidence at all that the temperatures involved were linked to the causes of death.
The third whiff that confirms that this is yet another product of the seemingly endless crocks of sh*t produced by AGW promoters is that in defining a heat wave as temperature in the 70o F range is an abuse of the definition that is designed to deceive the reader who is not willing to exercise critical thinking skills. This study is more appropriate to the field of psychology, where theories like “positive human functioning” and Lewandowsky’s pleas for help are taken as serious scholarship.
Then again, AGW workers have never actually provided rigorous science in their doomsday promotion.
Confounding factors: an aging population
changing population size
changing etnic composition
changes in average income (affordability of heating/cooling/clothing)
etc ..
Have the authors “measured” a decrease/change in winter mortality with the same methods, as a zero order check on the data?
I understand now why the cook was Swedish.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_European_heat_wave#Sweden
According to the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI), the city of Lund in Skåne in southern Sweden had the highest average temperatures (day and night: 21.6 °C (70.9 °F)) for the month of July since records began in 1859. The rest of Sweden has however not broken the daily average temperatures from the record year 1994.
Målilla and Ultuna are the places where the highest temperature ever in Sweden was recorded, 38 °C (100 °F), in 1947 and 1933 respectively.
@gopal panicker
It’s because it’s hot in India, so everybody has air conditioning!
…at least that’s what I extrapolate from the theory posited in the original paper, saying that Sweden has no cooling infrastructure.
I may be putting too much stock in the opinion of nimrods…
Drowning is also heat related death cause here in Nordics. At least in Finland (next to Sweden), Finns tend to go swimming and various levels of drunken state and drown. And that mostly happens when it is very warm and sunny day.
@hunter,
Indeed, it’s been a virtual crock-storm lately from the desperate climatists, watching in horror as their precious Warmist ideology gets flushed down the tubes. At this rate, can Crockageddon be far behind?
So what about the other side of the coin – decreased deaths due to not-so-frigid winters?
Yeah, this is why life expectancy is dropping in Sweden. Or is it?
Looks like a job for Dr. Ross (Superstats) McKitrick.
Me? I’m gonna have a dish of ice cream to cool down.
People die in the winter, if they get too cold…
…people die in the summer, if the get too hot
More people die as populations increase, because there’s more people living below the poverty line and there’s an older population
The article is of course only to laugh at, too high summer temperatures are hardly a problem Stockholm 🙂
The observatory is though very nice and located on a hill right in the middle of the city. You will find a lot of references here: http://bolin.su.se/data/stockholm/
The temperature series provided by SMHI include the raw data and adjusted data for UHI etc. A related temperature series is the one from Uppsala, 150 km north of Stockholm.
http://www.smhi.se/polopoly_fs/1.2864!stockholm_daily_mean_temperature_1756_2012.zip
http://www.smhi.se/polopoly_fs/1.2866!uppsala_tm_1722-2012.zip
For starters, according to the data listed in the SI, the supposed extra deaths due to climate change manifesting itself as increased summer temperatures came from model output; they didn’t actually have health services data/coroner data that showed causes of death.
This is standard practice in tobacco studies. The number of casualties of tobacco (usually 400,000) is a projection. There are no actual dead bodies with data showing cause of death.
My point exactly and thanks for the numbers. The ALLEGED ‘detection’ of 300 deaths over 30 years is laughable. I’m sure some people die of heatstroke, just like in many other places, but is it worth a paper?
And in related weather news: