Curry on the Cowtan & Way 'pausebuster': 'Is there anything useful [in it]?"

Dr. Judith Curry writes about the Cowtan and Way paper which (according to some pundits) purports to “bust” the temperature pause of the last 17 years by claiming we just didn’t pay enough attention to the Arctic and Antarctic where there is no data. They do this by infilling data where there is none, such as NASA GISS tries to do by infilling temperatures from stations far away with their smoothing algorithm.

GISS station data with 250km smoothing:

GISS_polar_250KM

GISS station data with 1200km smoothing:

GISS_polar_1200KM

Breathless interpreters of Cowtan & Way claim that by doing the same with satellite data instead of tortured surface data, Voilà “the pause” disappears.

Cowtan & Way are trying to address this lack of surface station data in these regions by doing infill from satellite data. At first glance, this seems an admirable and reasonable goal, but one should always be wary of trying to create data where there is none, something we learned about in Steig et al’s discredited paper on the supposed Antarctic warming. Plus, as some WUWT readers know, there’s a reason that satellite temperature data coverage doesn’t fully cover the poles. See the information on the UAH data at the bottom of this post.

A video of their methodology follows.

WUWT readers will note the before and after HadCRUT imagery from Cowtan & Way below. Take special note of the Arctic.

Cowtan-Wray_before-after

A discussion on that Arctic temperature infilling addition at high latitude follows Dr. Curry’s analysis.

Dr Judith Curry writes:

=============================================================

Let’s take a look at the 3 methods they use to fill in missing data, primarily in Africa, Arctic, and Antarctic.

  1. 1.  Kriging
  2. 2.  UAH satellite analyses of surface air temperature
  3. 3.  NCAR NCEP reanalysis

The state that most of the difference in their reconstructed global average comes from the Arctic, so I focus on the Arctic (which is where I have special expertise in any event).

First, Kriging.  Kriging across land/ocean/sea ice boundaries makes no physical sense.  While the paper cites Rigor et al. (2000) that shows ‘some’ correlation in winter between land and sea ice temps at up to 1000 km, I would expect no correlation in other seasons.

Second, UAH satellite analyses.  Not useful at high latitudes in the presence of temperature inversions and not useful over sea ice (which has a very complex spatially varying microwave emission signature).  Hopefully John Christy will chime in on this.

Third, re reanalyses in the Arctic. See Fig 1 from this paper, which gives you a sense of the magnitude of grid point errors for one point over an annual cycle.  Some potential utility here, but reanalyses are not useful for trends owing to temporal inhomogeneities in the datasets that are assimilated.

So I don’t think Cowtan and Wray’s [sic] analysis adds anything to our understanding of the global surface temperature field and the ‘pause.’

The bottom line remains Ed Hawkins’ figure that compares climate model simulations for regions where the surface observations exist.  This is the appropriate way to compare climate models to surface observations, and the outstanding issue is that the climate models and observations disagree.

aahawkins

Is there anything useful from Cowtan and Wray?  Well, they raise the issue that we should try to figure out some way obtain the variations of surface temperature over the Arctic Ocean.  This is an active topic of research.

===============================================================

More from the same post at Dr. Curry’s site here

What is really funny is how Dana Nuccitelli has done an about-face since the satellite data now supports his argument. In his Guardian 97% piece [cited in Dr. Curry’s article] he’s all for this method.

But, just two years ago he was trashing the UAH satellite data on SKS as “misinformation”.

Dana_bozoed_UAH

[http://www.skepticalscience.com/uah-misrepresentation-anniversary-part1.html]

But Dana thinks UAH data is apparently OK today. What a plonker.

I will give Dr. Cowtan props though for realizing what the hypers don’t. He says this in the Guardian article:

“No difficult scientific problem is ever solved in a single paper. I don’t expect our paper to be the last word on this, but I hope we have advanced the discussion.

I give him props for having a sense of reality, something sorely lacking in climate science today.

Here’s why trying to use the satellite data to infill surface data at the poles is problematic:

Take a look at this latest image for 1000mb (near the surface) from the polar orbiting satellite NOAA-18, one of the satellites UAH now uses for temperature data:

NOAA18_polar_1000mb

Source: NOAA/NESDIS Office of Satellite Data Processing and Distribution (OSDPD)

Note how the data near the poles starts to get spotty with coverage? Note also how the plot doesn’t go to 90N or 90S?

NOAA doesn’t even try to plot data from there, for the reasons that Dr. Curry has given:

Second, UAH satellite analyses.  Not useful at high latitudes in the presence of temperature inversions and not useful over sea ice (which has a very complex spatially varying microwave emission signature).

NOAA knows high latitude near-pole data will be noisy and not representative, so they don’t even try to display it. UAH is the same way. Between the look-angle problem and the noise generated by sea ice, their data analysis stops short of the pole. RSS does the same due to the same physical constraints of orbit and look angle.

As you can see, the polar orbit isn’t truly polar. Here are maps from UCAR that helps to visualize the problem:

As you can see, the orbit path never reaches 90N or 90S.

Source: http://www.rap.ucar.edu/~djohnson/satellite/coverage.html#polar

They write:

Note that the orbit is slightly tilted towards the northwest and does not actually go over the poles. While the red path follows the earth track of the satellite, the transparent overlay indicates the coverage area for the AVHRR imaging instrument carried by NOAA/POES satellites. This instrument scans a roughly 3000 km wide swath. The map projection used in this illustration, a cylindrical equidistant projection, becomes increasingly distorted near the poles, as can be seen by the seeming explosion of the viewing area as the satellite nears its northern and southern most orbital limits.

CAPTION: This is a polar stereographic presentation of the north polar region, showing the tracks of seven consecutive overpasses by a polar orbiting satellite. This shows the considerable degree of overlap between consecutive orbits. The orbital period is slightly greater than 100 minutes, with just over 14 orbits in a day. These seven passes thus represent only about half of the daily passes over the north pole. Source: http://www.rap.ucar.edu/~djohnson/satellite/polar.html#north_pole

So, not only is the satellite coverage distorted at the poles due to the look angle, the look angle issue actually causes the satellite to image a wider swath of an area known to produce noisy and highly uncertain microwave data. Basically, the higher the latitude of the satellite imaging past about 60N/60S, the more uncertain the data gets.

It seems to me that all that Cowtan & Wray have done is swapped one type of highly uncertain data infilling with another. The claim that the addition of this highly uncertain data to HadCRUT4 seems to contradict ‘the pause’ most certainly isn’t proven yet, as even Dr. Cowtan admits to in his caveat.

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KNR
November 14, 2013 12:51 pm

There was a time when people understood that even two valleys next to each other could have different weather , there was a times when people understood that mountains create their own weather and you can not use their weather patterns to predict what happens in other areas.
But now thanks to the ‘magic’ of AGW we can take weather data from one area and apply it to another one many,, many miles away which is total different in nature .

chris y
November 14, 2013 12:51 pm

When plotting data from 1979 to 2013, all of the datasets show warming to various amounts. They all show a reduced trend since around 1998. Presumably there has been extensive analysis comparing surface and troposphere measurements at a plethora of locations around the globe. There should not be any surprises wherever this comparison has already been made. That turns out to be at least 90% of the global surface.
Now consider the Arctic region, where all the bright red temperature anomalies apparently exist. From the Arctic circle to the pole, this represents only about 4% of the total globe surface area. In order for this tiny chunk of area to create a significant change in the global surface temperature trend, the temperature trends there must be absolutely massive.
This is not credible. Something is fishy in Denmark.
On a positive note, if this paper turns out to be valid, then the global surface temperature trend prior to 1979 is essentially unknowable.

lurker, passing through laughing
November 14, 2013 12:54 pm

So the latest in sophisticated methodology, using populations of 0 to prove the presence of the desired outcome, becomes ever more popular with AGW hypesters.

John West
November 14, 2013 12:58 pm

So, if they’re right, then the pause is actually a slowdown that should have been a period of acceleration per circa 1990 official story line. Remember the IPCC report with the graphic showing ever increasing trends of warming that supposedly proved it’s us and it’s worse than we thought and we’re doomed? Sorry, I don’t see it as a problem for the “skeptical” position of low sensitivity if Global Warming has slowed down during a period of ever increasing CO2 concentration.

November 14, 2013 12:59 pm

Perhaps I can be more clear…
That study is clearly worth a Lew-en-dorsement!
It has all the required features — including data derived from …. nothing… zero sum, ergo sum.

lurker, passing through laughing
November 14, 2013 1:04 pm

This latest paper stinks of post hoc excuse finding. First the pause was due to heat magically hiding in the deep ocean, conveniently out of reach of measurement. And skeptics were shredded by the climatistas for questioning the mechanism of transportation. Now the warming is hiding at the poles, also conveniently out of reach of measurement.
And skeptics are to be blamed for asking “how does that work?”, and for pointing out flaws in the methodology of the latest “where’s AGW?”.
AGW is like tinkerbell- if we wish really really hard, AGW will be all better.

Ian W
November 14, 2013 1:05 pm

davidmhoffer says:
November 14, 2013 at 12:30 pm
numerobis;
That said, the strength of the feedback is logarithmic: you get X warming by doubling the number of molecules.
>>>>>>>>>
Provided that they are evenly distributed through the troposphere….which water vapour is NOT.

Water does not scatter the infrared it absorbs it. Thus it raises the heat content of the air without raising its temperature. That is the enthalpy of the air (its heat capacity) increases as the humidity increases.
Mosher and all the other non-engineers are averaging temperature are thus averaging the wrong metric. They should be measuring heat content in kilojoules per kilogram. After all isn’t the ‘global warming hypothesis’ about trapping heat – you can’t trap temperature Steven can you?
So as davidmhoffer says it requires almost no heat at all to raise the temperature of a volume of dry arctic air at minus 30C by one degree, but a large amount of energy is required to raise the temperature of a similar volume of 90% humidity equatorial Pacific air by one degree because the humid air enthalpy is so much higher. Yet you ‘highly trained climate scientists’ average the temperature of these volumes of air to measure heat???
For that reason alone the Cowtan and Way should have been thrown out at peer review.

Editor
November 14, 2013 1:12 pm

Steven Mosher says: “2. How do we estimate the ‘missing data’…”
Use satellite-enhanced sea surface temperature data for the open ocean, when there is open water in the Arctic and Southern Oceans. The poor in situ coverage of the polar oceans is one of the primary reasons satellite-enhanced SST datasets exist.

November 14, 2013 1:13 pm

So………….the missing heat is hiding in the cold?

November 14, 2013 1:22 pm

Jimbo says:
“November 14, 2013 at 11:30 am
What have we seen in the Arctic this year? It was a chilly one and sea ice extent was significantly higher this September on last year…
http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/meant80n.uk.php
This web site has the following info:
“Plus 80N Temperatures – explanation.
The temperature graphs are made from numerical weather prediction (NWP)
“analysis” data. Analyses are the model fields used to start NWP models. They
represent the statistically most likely state of the atmosphere, given the
information available to make the analysis. Since the data are gridded, it is
straight forward to deduce the average temperature North of 80 degree North.
However, since the model is gridded in a regular 0.5 degree grid, the mean
temperature values are strongly biased towards the temperature in the most
northern part of the Arctic! Therefore, do NOT use this measure as an actual
physical mean temperature of the arctic. The ‘plus 80 North mean temperature’
graphs can be used for comparing one year to an other.”
My question is can this data be converted to annual mean temp and compared to
previous years?

FrankK
November 14, 2013 1:23 pm

The following sums up the Cowtan and Way “analysis”:
“When you reach the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on.”
― Abraham Lincoln

Geckko
November 14, 2013 1:26 pm

What exactly is the justification for using some of the satellite data and not all of it?
Both satellite series support the existance of the pause.

Nick Stokes
November 14, 2013 1:32 pm

“At first glance, this seems an admirable and reasonable goal, but one should always be wary of trying to create data where there is none, something we learned about in Steig et al’s discredited paper on the supposed Antarctic warming.”
Steig’s paper was not discredited, and particularly not his method of fitting satellite-derived EOFs to station data to infill. His critics Ryan et al used the same method. They used more EOFs, which gave an improvement.
Whenever you calculate a space average from sampled data, there is an implied assumption that the samples are representative of data in between. That’s not just climate science, it’s for any continuum analysis. The average is justified by interpolation. Any form of rational interpolation is better than leaving areas out.

Christopher Hanley
November 14, 2013 1:34 pm

The Apocalypse has risen, Alleluia!

November 14, 2013 1:35 pm

Ian W;
I hate to burst your bubble, but ghg theory has little to do with heat capacity or heat at all. We get very sloppy with terminology in this debate. The relationship is to energy flux and temperature. That’s why I said “energy balance” above rather than heat, but I am one of the ones guilty of sometimes using “heat” when that is the wrong term. Per your comment, water vapour does absorb but it also re-radiates, and this changes the mean radiating level and the temperature profile from surface to TOA as a consequence. Here is a pretty good explanatio:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/03/10/visualizing-the-greenhouse-effect-emission-spectra/

November 14, 2013 1:37 pm

Stupid question for Mr Mosher:
If we extrapolate arctic region temps from measured temps, assuming the methodology is accurate, would not a 17 year pause in the measured temps result in a 17 year pause in the extrapolated temps?

Mark Bofill
November 14, 2013 1:45 pm

Nick Stokes said,

Whenever you calculate a space average from sampled data, there is an implied assumption that the samples are representative of data in between. That’s not just climate science, it’s for any continuum analysis. The average is justified by interpolation. Any form of rational interpolation is better than leaving areas out.

I’m often critical of Nick but I’ve got to say I think he’s got a point here. I haven’t read the paper (with my limited grasp of the science it wouldn’t make all that much difference if I did) but from what I’ve gathered so far from the discussions about it I’m thinking this paper is probably pretty solid. Perfect? No, but it’s probably a step in the right direction.

November 14, 2013 1:48 pm

…and here is my favourite graphic from ERBE:
http://eos.atmos.washington.edu/cgi-bin/erbe/disp.pl?net.ann.
A few moments studying this, and you can easily see that
1. The tropics are net absorbers of energy. They absorb strongest over regions where humidity is high.
2. The arctic regions are net radiators of energy.
So, simply put, energy is absorbed from the sun in the tropics, via various mechanisms such as wind and water currents it is moved to the arctic regions, from which it is beamed out into space. If the temps in the arctic regions are in fact rising while the rest of the earth has remained the same, it means that energy is being pumped into space FASTER than before and (depending on by how much) this may mean the system is LOSING energy and thus COOLING despite having a higher average temperature.
Which is why it is insane, ludicrous, and completely useless to average temperature in the first place.

November 14, 2013 1:50 pm

Re: numerobis 11:11 am
I find it quite ironic that in the polar latitudes where the solar-synchronous orbits allow overlap and multiple readings per day instead of just one daylight reading per day at the equator, the data gets harder to use.

November 14, 2013 1:53 pm

“Climate Science”: Making stuff up for a generation

james griffin
November 14, 2013 2:01 pm

What pause?….the planet is not behaving in the way predicted by the models because they are acts of fantasy. The AGW mob had their chance in 2002 but the Aqua satellite found no evidence of Troposphere warming….game over in the real world. However when a theory is turned into an agenda, then a way of life and the believers turn it into a religion there is no going back…or not for this generation anyway. If as seems likely the Solar Physicists are correct and we experience a deep solar minimum in the middle of this century we will need all the CO2 we can get but until then the madness will continue.
One would have thought by now that the media could have shown just a little professionalism by comparing current temps with those from earlier this Holocene…and several recent Holocene’s as well.

Jquip
November 14, 2013 2:02 pm

Nick Stokes: “Steig’s paper was not discredited, and particularly not his method of fitting satellite-derived EOFs to station data to infill”
Define discredited. Because just looking at the before/after pictures at the link show that, whatever Steig was doing, it didn’t have any relation to thermometers.
And define ‘fitting …. to…’ Because if we’re fitting satellite imagery to faked numbers, then it’s damned wrong on it’s face. No matter if it’s done in the manner or Steig, Ryan, or in any other fashion.
“The average is justified by interpolation. Any form of rational interpolation is better than leaving areas out.”
Because “We don’t know and need more instruments” isn’t good for… funding? Nope, that gets you funding. Must be for the speaking tours and activism.
And define ‘rational’, because what is irrational is to state that the area under a curve we know to be non-linear and with possibly zero peaks, possibly many, is some ‘smooth’ progression from place to place. It’s even more irrational to state you can take any manner of sensible average off that. For all that’s worth you might as well measure hips, busts, fake some waist measurements, and call it the average Marilyn Monroe. It’s that not just numerology, but whiskey-fueled ditch-drunk numerology.

Louis
November 14, 2013 2:02 pm

If climate scientists accept this paper, won’t they be admitting that they have been calculating the average global temperature wrong all this time? If they could make such a big mistake in how they estimated polar temperatures, doesn’t that open the door to the possibility of other major mistakes in their methodology? Do they really want to admit that the science isn’t so settled after all?

Joe Below
November 14, 2013 2:03 pm

Mr. Greene, you misunderstand. The belief is that while obviously the temperatures will be different between any two locations 500km apart, the trends in the data will be similar. So if
you don’t have enough data to compute a valid trend at station A, but you do at station B which is within some radius (500km, for example), you can assume that the trends will be similiar at both stations and can compute a trend at station A based on the data that is available for station A using the trend information from station B. I’m not sure I buy into that, I suspect that geographical, land use, development (UHI) and microclimatalogical constraints apply to the choice of station B, but there you are.

November 14, 2013 2:03 pm

Nick Stokes;
Any form of rational interpolation is better than leaving areas out.
>>>>>>>>>>>.
…and same question to you as to Mr Mosher. If there has been a 17 year pause in the MEASURED temps, then how does one arrive at anything but a 17 year pause in the INTERPOLATED temps?