U.S. Postal Service issues 'global warming' Forever® stamp?

GlobalForever2014[1]This just in from the U.S.Postal service. (h/t to Marc Morano) In 2014, the U.S. Postal Service introduces Global: Sea Surface Temperatures, a new Forever® international rate stamp.

Hmmm, not only is it an oddball stamp, being round, it isn’t even of actual sea surface temperatures, it’s a model output. That’s not a real El Niño pattern you see on the stamp, it’s a simulation frame. See the “Inside the science” below. You’d think they would use one that depicts reality, not a model projection.  Our current SST image looks a lot different than the stamp – no reds, lots of blues, which show our current reality to be cooler than the modeled one.

anomnight.current.small[1]

Source: http://www.ospo.noaa.gov/Products/ocean/sst/anomaly/

On the plus side, the stamp is $1.15, so it won’t get much circulation, it might be a collectors item though in a few years.

From USPS.gov

This round stamp features a visual representation of our planet’s sea surface temperatures. It shows the Earth with North America at the center and parts of South America, Asia, and Europe just visible on the edges, surrounded by vivid bands of color throughout the oceans. The image is one frame in a 1,460-frame animation created from the output of a computer model of Earth’s climate by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. The full animation shows how the surface temperatures of the oceans vary seasonally and change over time, and how surface ocean currents and eddies transport heat and water around the globe.

This image also combines the depiction of sea-surface temperatures with visible vegetation on the land masses, an element derived from a satellite composite created by NASA. Text repeated twice around the circumference of the stamp reads “GLOBAL USA FOREVER 2014.”

Art director William J. Gicker designed this stamp.

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From the Inside the science page at USPS.gov

Inside the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Lab­oratory in Princeton, New Jersey, scientists Keith Dixon and Tom Delworth and their team are busy predicting the future. Their “crystal ball” is a virtual model of Earth powered by one of the world’s largest super­computers.

Working with meteorologists, oceanographers, computer scientists, biologists, statisticians, and others to manipulate the models, the team at GFDL, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration center, is pushing to understand how the climate will respond to agents like volcanic eruption or industrial pollution. They use these elegant, complex climate models, whose ancestors can be traced back to the 1960s, to stage “what if” scenarios: What happens if the state of the Atlantic changes dramatically? Or if greenhouse gases continue to change the chemical composition of the atmosphere?

“The reason we need to do this is we can’t perform real experiments,” Dixon says. “We don’t have a twin planet Earth.”

Global: Sea Surface Temperatures

Sea surface temperature scale

To make a prediction — say, whether or not an El Niño is going to form next year — the researchers gather observations and start the model using a set of conditions that reflects the real world at a given time. The model isn’t absorbing ongoing, real-time truths from the Earth, per se, through a satellite or weather balloon like some might suspect. Rather, it’s using general conditions — such as the composition of land and water, and how the Earth revolves around the sun — in tandem with the great laws of physics to mimic the climate’s behavior. Millions of grid boxes tell a story about what’s happening in a particular space, interacting with each other in a dance of physics to tell a greater global narrative.

Drawing on this data, the New Jersey team uses software to create a series of images that each represent one day in the life of the virtual Earth. From there, the images are sent to a sister NOAA center in Colorado, Earth System Research Laboratory, where they’re stitched into animations that show how heat and water travel through the globe over several years. (These animations are then projected onto room-sized globes that help people understand, and become captivated by, the environment.)

The Global: Sea Surface Temperatures stamp image — one frame in a 1,460-frame (or four-year) animation — is a single snapshot of the team’s studies. To understand climate trends both past and future, the researchers must first grasp the pattern of sea surface temperatures. The two are inseparable. The ocean is a massive bank of heat from the sun and, as such, it stabilizes the Earth’s temperature, governing the seasons and stimulating changes in weather.

During the 1970s and ’80s, for example, there was a severe drought in sub-Saharan Africa. Using the global climate model to investigate the cause, GFDL scientists found that shifting sea surface temperatures were largely to blame. During those decades, the temperature of the North Atlantic was slightly cooler than normal and the South Atlantic slightly warmer, causing the rains to shift southward.

Keith Dixon“The reason we need to do this is we can’t perform real exper­iments. We don’t have a twin planet earth.”

Keith Dixon

“Patterns of sea surface temperatures influence weather around the planet sometimes for months and even years,” Delworth says.

The stamp image shows how heat pools near the equator, travels ribbon-like along the Gulf Stream, or wiggles in the tropics where warm and cooler waters mingle. (While some of these features are evident at stamp size, the researchers laugh that they’re used to viewing the graphic at a much larger scale.)

Global: Sea Surface Temperatures, pane of 10

Like the climate research it points to, the Global: Sea Surface Temperatures stamp has an international reach, covering the cost of sending a First-Class™ one-ounce letter to any country in the world.

But data is of course meaningless apart from the insights of human beings — and climate researchers like Dixon and Delworth are driven toward discoveries that will speak to some of society’s big questions.

“The field [of climate study] is really moving toward trying to understand how climate change will impact weather on very regional and local scales,” Delworth says, “and how it will impact extremes like storms, droughts, and floods that cause society a tremendous amount of damage.”

Delworth says there’s been broad consensus over the past 10 to 15 years that the Earth has warmed considerably since the middle of the 20th century, that the warming is largely due to human activity, and that the warming will continue. So now the question becomes: What are the aftereffects?

As GFDL’s computer power increases — and the grid boxes multiply, the global climate model growing sharper in resolution — the answers in the swirling globe will likely become ever clearer.

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June 6, 2014 2:38 am

lee says:
June 5, 2014 at 9:05 pm

Models on a catwalk are nice. But when it comes to models I prefer full disclosure.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
June 6, 2014 3:32 am

From M Simon on June 6, 2014 at 2:38 am:

Models on a catwalk are nice. But when it comes to models I prefer full disclosure.

It is important to verify models are not hiding anything anywhere.

Glenn A. Plant
June 6, 2014 4:22 am

Just how good is their computer model if it does not take into account things like the coriolis effect on ocean currents? Looks like warm water is creeping *up* the west coast.

June 6, 2014 5:28 am

Global Warming Forever.
Yes, please.
To be fair, the stamp is a map of SSTs and the other map you show is of SST anomalies. So, of course, the color scales and patterns don’t match up. As someone else pointed out, they do depict and extensive Arctic ice sheet as well as Greenland mostly covered in ice. In the end, this is just a postage stamp not a peer-reviewed journal article. Maybe I will buy a First Day cover for my stamp collection to go with my 5 kopec Kim Philby stamp from the bad ol’ USSR. 😉

AnonyMoose
June 6, 2014 6:09 am

RIP climate models.
The USPS does not issue stamps of someone who is living.

Roy Spencer
June 6, 2014 7:09 am

the stamp shows what is probably the most realistic depiction of sea surface temperature patterns, even though it is a model. Here’s 3-day satellite-measured averages, which shows similar features, but are a little smoothed out:
http://images.remss.com/sst/sst_data_daily.html

June 6, 2014 7:47 am

Tom in Florida says:
June 5, 2014 at 6:53 pm
You’all are missing the point. The USPS sells different stamps representing different groups because it creates revenue. What better way to use global warming to tap into the pockets of the believers and do gooders.

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Maybe the next stamp will be a hexagon and depict one of those solar road panels.

Craig C
June 6, 2014 9:16 am

FYI – International Forever stamps have been round since they came out, and the price is in line with the increases in recent years. Those of us who do mailings are happy not to have to add supplemental postage all the time.

Resourceguy
June 6, 2014 9:26 am

Nice stamp—for $20T big ones and science fraud in the process.

James at 48
June 6, 2014 9:58 am

If I buy that stamp, will we get a real El Nino and get rid of this Q$#$ drought? 🙂

faboutlaws
June 6, 2014 11:06 am

How about a half naked bust of Marilyn Monroe on a stamp. She’s dead. She’s a lot easier on the eyes than Michael Mann.

El Nino Nanny
June 7, 2014 6:52 pm

Why not check out the range of ludicrous El Nino forecasts here :
http://wattsupwiththat.com/reference-pages/climatic-phenomena-pages/enso/enso-forecast-page/
One of them is almost bound to be nearly correct, since they vary in all conceivable directions. Yet you’d think, wouldn’t you, that if these models had ANY credibility, that they would all be more or less the same path of variations. The fact that they do not, shows what a load of old cobblers they really are.
We shall have to just wait and see, but however the pattern emerging looks like it could be a Modoki El Nino, and that would not affect temperatures so much in South America, as it would in Northern USA, Australasia, and Indonesia for instance. Compare the current temperatures in the chart here :
http://www.ospo.noaa.gov/Products/ocean/sst/anomaly/
with those of the Modoki El Nino pattern described here :
http://www.jamstec.go.jp/frcgc/research/d1/iod/enmodoki_home_s.html.en
If it does turn out to be a full blown Modoki, then the US Postal Service has made an even greater blunder than is described in the above article. Maybe they should stick to ex-Presidents, and other famous Americans of note, like Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Mohammed Ali, etc.

Keith A. Nonemaker
June 10, 2014 10:47 am

The post office has a long-standing policy of portraying only deceased subjects on postage stamps. When it issued an Elvis stamp some years ago, it was considered the final proof that Elvis really was dead. So we now have the official final word from the government:
Global Warming Is Dead!

Michael Lewis
June 13, 2014 12:00 pm

I resent tax payer dollars used to promote good PR for an agency I disagree with:
“To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves is sinful and tyrannical.” — Thomas Jefferson
“There is no worse tyranny than to force a man to pay for what he does not want merely because you think it would be good for him.” — Robert A. Heinlein (1907-1988) American writer
Regulating the use of coal fired power plants in America, while shipping American coal to China, where they are building two coal fired plants a week, only increases the price of electricity in America.
http://www.thegwpf.org/china-india-building-4-coal-power-plants-week/
And building failed alternative energy plants in America only enriches the political cronies of Obama and allows the Chinese to purchase the bankruptcies for pennies on the dollar.
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-57566519/chinese-firm-gets-ok-to-buy-failed-u.s-battery-maker/
The EPA should acknowledge that scientists that originally proposed the global warming hypothesis have recanted and say the Earth has been cooling for the last decade.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10875414
And by the way, the Earth had hot and cool ages prior to the rise of man.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_dinosaurs
The real foundation of the global warming mantra is the trillions to be made in setting up and operating hot house gas commodity exchanges and the consequent global redistribution of wealth.
Read Bubble six in The Great American Bubble Machine. http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-great-american-bubble-machine-20100405
Legitimate scientists suggest sun spot cycles have more to do with global climate change than all the works of man.
http://www.space.com/19280-solar-activity-earth-climate.html