On the Biases Caused by Omissions in the 2014 NOAA State of the Climate Report

Guest Post by Bob Tisdale

[Update:  Corrected a few typos in the paragraph before Figure 4. My thanks to rogerknights.]

I hadn’t read the NOAA State of the Climate (SOTC) Report for 2014 when I prepared the post Does the Uptick in Global Surface Temperatures in 2014 Help the Growing Difference between Climate Models and Reality?  (WattsUpWithThat cross post is here.) I simply presented data and climate model outputs in that post.

The following are a few observations about the annual NOAA report. NOAA biased their report by omitting key discussions.  First an introduction.

THE 2014 GLOBAL HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOAA SOTC REPORT

With respect to surface temperatures, the Global Highlights of the NOAA State of the Climate report reads (my boldface):

Global Highlights

  • The year 2014 was the warmest year across global land and ocean surfaces since records began in 1880. The annually-averaged temperature was 0.69°C (1.24°F) above the 20th century average of 13.9°C (57.0°F), easily breaking the previous records of 2005 and 2010 by 0.04°C (0.07°F). This also marks the 38th consecutive year (since 1977) that the yearly global temperature was above average. Including 2014, 9 of the 10 warmest years in the 135-year period of record have occurred in the 21st 1998 currently ranks as the fourth warmest year on record
  • The 2014 global average ocean temperature was also record high, at 0.57°C (1.03°F) above the 20th century average of 16.1°C (60.9°F), breaking the previous records of 1998 and 2003 by 0.05°C (0.09°F). Notably, ENSO-neutral conditions were present during all of 2014.
  • The 2014 global average land surface temperature was 1.00°C (1.80°F) above the 20th century average of 8.5°C (47.3°F), the fourth highest annual value on record.

Of course, the global highlights are what the mainstream media and alarmist blogs parrot. Some may even report on the Global Temperatures and Regional Temperatures portions of the NOAA report.  Few will venture beyond that.

BIAS OF OMISSION 1

It’s not until readers scroll down to the rankings table in the SOTC report that NOAA introduces uncertainties.  See my Figure 1.  So, according to NOAA, the “annually-averaged temperature was 0.69°C (1.24°F) above the 20th century average of 13.9°C (57.0°F), easily breaking the previous records of 2005 and 2010 by 0.04°C (0.07°F)”, but then NOAA clarifies their global surface temperature anomalies as “+0.69 ± 0.09” deg C.  Alas, we discover that the new record high by 0.04 deg C is within the +/-0.09 deg C uncertainty of the dataset.

Figure 1 - Rankings

Figure 1

Still farther down on the webpage we come across the links to NOAA’s Supplemental Information.

Supplemental Information

The first link brings us to the Calculating the Probability of Rankings for 2014 webpage.  There, after an initial discussion, they write (my boldface):

Using a Monte Carlo approach (Arguez et al, 2013), NCDC considered the known uncertainty of the global land and ocean annual temperature in the 2014 annual ranking. Taking into account the uncertainty and assuming all years (1880-2014) in the time series are independent, the chance of 2014 being

Warmest year on record: 48.0%

One of the five warmest years: 90.4%

One of the 10 warmest years: 99.2%

One of the 20 warmest years: 100.0%

Warmer than the 20th century average: 100.0%

Warmer than the 1981-2010 average: 100.0%

NCDC follows these conventions to categorize the confidence associated with assertions made with respect to ranks used in the report:

My Figure 2 is the “conventions to categorize” table that follows that discussion, with my highlight:

Figure 2 - Probabilities and Descriptors

Figure 2

So, according to NOAA, the chance that 2014 was the warmest on record was 48.0% and based on their table, the global surface temperature anomalies in 2014 appear in the range of “more unlikely than likely”.

Curiously, the NOAA omitted that all-important “more unlikely than likely” language from its main 2014 State of the Climate report webpage.  You have to click on the Supplemental Information links to discover that 2014 was “more unlikely than likely” the warmest on record.

Therefore, NOAA has biased the “Global Highlights” of their State of the Climate report by failing to note the likelihood, actually unlikelihood, that 2014 had the highest global surface temperatures on record.

BIAS OF OMISSION 2

The next topic is the El Niño event in 2014.

Under the heading of Global Temperatures on the main page of the NOAA SOTC report, they state:

This is the first time since 1990 the high temperature record was broken in the absence of El Niño conditions at any time during the year in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean, as indicated by NOAA’s CPC Oceanic Niño Index. This phenomenon generally tends to increase global temperatures around the globe, yet conditions remained neutral in this region during the entire year and the globe reached record warmth despite this.

NOAA’s Oceanic NINO Index is based on the NINO3.4 region (5S-5N, 170W-120W) of the equatorial Pacific. See the NOAA map of the NINO regions here. And according to a Hovmoller diagram of the sea surface temperature anomalies from the NOAA GODAS website, Figure 3, El Niño conditions (sea surface temperature anomalies equal to or greater than +0.5 deg C) existed along the equatorial Pacific east and west of the NINO3.4 region for most of 2014.

Figure 3 - 2014 NOAA GODAS Equatorial SSTa Hovmoller

Figure 3

In other words, the sea surface temperature data indicate El Niño conditions existed for most of the year, but not in the region that NOAA uses to define an El Niño. Further to this, as we discussed in the most recent ENSO update and in the post The Little El Niño That Didn’t or Might Have (Depends on the Agency and Index), the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) notes that El Niño conditions have existed since June.

In December 2014, the NINO.3 SST was above normal with a deviation of +0.9°C and five-month running mean of the NINO.3 SST deviation was +0.5°C or above for five consecutive months from June to November (Table and Fig.1). SSTs were above normal in most regions from the western to eastern equatorial Pacific (Fig.2 and Fig.4). Subsurface temperatures were above normal in the eastern equatorial Pacific (Fig.3 and Fig.5). These oceanic conditions indicate that El Niño conditions are present in the equatorial Pacific…

And the reason the JMA makes this claim is they use the NINO3 region (5S-5N, 150W-90W), which overlaps and runs east of the NINO3.4 region.

Therefore, NOAA has omitted the fact that data indicate El Niño conditions existed along the equatorial Pacific, outside of the region they use as an ENSO index, so they could claim ENSO “conditions remained neutral in this region during the entire year and the globe reached record warmth despite this.”

Of course, the intent of that NOAA statement was to give the impression that there was a general overall warming that could not be attributed to El Niño conditions, when, in fact, El Niño conditions did exist in 2014.

BIAS OF OMISSION 3

This is a discussion of the additional cause of the elevated sea surface temperatures.

NOAA notes in their “Global Highlights” (my boldface):

Much of the record warmth for the globe can be attributed to record warmth in the global oceans. The annually-averaged temperature for ocean surfaces around the world was 0.57°C (1.03°F) higher than the 20th century average, easily breaking the previous records of 1998 and 2003 by 0.05°C (0.09°F). The first four months (January–April) each ranked among their seven warmest for their respective months and the following seven consecutive months (May–November) were record warm. The year ended with December third warmest on record for the month.

In 2014, the warmth was due to large regions of record warm and much warmer-than-average temperatures in parts of every major ocean basin. Record warmth for the year was particularly notable in the northeastern Pacific Ocean in and around the Gulf of Alaska, much of the western equatorial Pacific, parts of the western North Atlantic and western South Atlantic, and much of the Norwegian and Barents Seas. Nearly the entire Indian Ocean was much warmer than average with a broad swath between Madagascar and Australia record warm. Part of the Atlantic Ocean south of Greenland and the Southern Ocean waters off the southern tip of South America were much cooler than average, with one localized area near Antarctica record cold.

NOAA mentioned the elevated sea surface temperatures in the eastern extratropical North Pacific in passing.  An unusual weather event in the North Pacific (along with the El Niño conditions) was, in fact, the primary reason for the elevated sea surface temperatures in 2014.  That is not so [to] say that there were [weren’t] elevated sea surface temperatures in specific parts of other ocean basins, but in general, those elevated temperatures in basins outside of the North Pacific had no impact on the record highs. As a result, if we plot the sea surface temperature anomalies since 1997 for the oceans outside of the North Pacific, 2014 was not an unusually warm year…nowhere close to a record high. See the top cell of Figure 4.  The bottom cell is for the global oceans, including the North Pacific. Obviously, in 2014, the events in the North Pacific were the primary reasons for the elevated sea surface temperatures globally.

Figure 4

Figure 4

There were two “weather” events that impacted the surface temperatures of the North Pacific in 2014: (1) the El Niño conditions in the tropical Pacific, which directly impacted the surface temperatures of the tropical North Pacific, and (2) the unusual weather event in the eastern extratropical Pacific, which is so well known that climate scientists call the hotspot it created “the blob”.  Because of the two weather events in the Pacific, not human-induced global warming, sea surface temperatures were elevated globally in 2014. In turn, because land surface temperatures were not at record highs, it is logical to say that those two weather events were responsible for the record high combined (land and ocean) surface temperatures that were “more unlikely than likely” to have existed in 2014.

We have discussed in numerous posts the reasons for the elevated sea surface temperatures in the eastern extratropical North Pacific this year. See:

  1. On The Recent Record-High Global Sea Surface Temperatures – The Wheres and Whys
  2. Axel Timmermann and Kevin Trenberth Highlight the Importance of Natural Variability in Global Warming…
  3. Alarmists Bizarrely Claim “Just what AGW predicts” about the Record High Global Sea Surface Temperatures in 2014
  4. Researchers Find Northeast Pacific Surface Warming (1900-2012) Caused By Changes in Atmospheric Circulation, NOT Manmade Forcings
  5. Did ENSO and the “Monster” Kelvin Wave Contribute to the Record High Global Sea Surface Temperatures in 2014?

As we noted and illustrated in the second post linked above, the unusual weather event in the eastern extratropical North Pacific lasted for 2 years.  It also contributed to the California drought.  And we illustrated the following in the first post linked above.

As an exercise, if we start our analysis in 2012 and work our way back in time, for how long of a time period did the sea surfaces of the North Pacific show no warming?  The answer, using NOAA’s ERSST.v3b data, is 23 years, yet the climate models used by the IPCC indicate they should have warmed about 0.5 deg C in that time.

Figure 5

Figure 5

NOTE: If you were to click on the link to the first post, you’d note that using NOAA’s satellite-enhanced sea surface temperature dataset we can extend that period to 24 years. [End note.]

It’s unrealistic to assume the warming of the surfaces of the North Pacific in 2013 and 2014 were caused by manmade greenhouse gases, when they hadn’t warmed in at least 23 years before then.

CLOSING

According to NOAA definitions, global surface temperatures for 2014 were “More Unlikely Than Likely” the highest on record, but they failed to note that on the main page of their State of the Climate report.  NOAA used a specific ENSO index to claim that El Niño conditions did not exist in 2014, when at least one other index says El Niño conditions existed. And NOAA failed to discuss the actual causes of the elevated global sea surface temperatures in 2014, while making it appear that there was a general warming of the surfaces of the global oceans.

NOAA never stated specifically that 2014’s record high surface temperatures were a result of human-induced global warming, but they implied it…thus all the hoopla.  NOAA has omitted key discussions within that report, which biases it toward human-induced global warming.  In other words, the NOAA State of the Climate report was misleading.  NOAA has once again shown it is a political entity, not a scientific one.  And that’s a damn shame.  The public needs openness from NOAA about climate; we do not need to be misled by politically motivated misdirection and misinformation.

# # #

[Oops, I forgot to thank BruceC for noting NOAA’s uncertainties in a comment at WUWT.  That comment prompted this post.]

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masInt branch 4 C3I in is
January 17, 2015 3:36 pm

I suspect the timing of the NASA+NOAA (Dept. of Commerce and not really independent) has to do with the World Economic Forum in Davos Switzerland and drumming up fears of climate catastrophe than even NOAA’s love of Numerology.

thebuckwheat
January 17, 2015 3:47 pm

While “according to NOAA, the chance that 2014 was the warmest on record was 48.0%”, the chance is 100% that the solutions that will be proposed by climate alarmists will converge on less personal liberty, higher taxes and expenses, larger government and yet more socialism.
Me? I am waiting for some peer-reviewed papers that propose what the optimum climate is for our biosphere. The first question that would naturally flow would be where is our current climate and trend in relation to this finding.
Strangely, nobody seems interested in this vital comparison.

richard
Reply to  thebuckwheat
January 18, 2015 2:38 am

Wildlife is thriving in cities up to 10- 20 degrees hotter than the surrounding countryside for starters.

RobW
January 17, 2015 4:26 pm

“NOAA has once again shown it is a political entity, not a scientific one. And that’s a damn shame. The public needs openness from NOAA about climate; we do not need to be misled by politically motivated misdirection and misinformation.”
What a shame. All science will suffer from this type of political interference in science.

robert
Reply to  RobW
January 18, 2015 5:26 am

I predict President Obama will note in his State of the Union address that 2104 was the hottest year on record due to CAGW and that we must cut carbon emissions significantly (he may tout his deal with China) and redistribute wealth from the richer countries to poorer countries as a recompense for our past transgression of polluting the planet. Interesting that the NOAA report came out just before the address.

Bill Illis
January 17, 2015 4:33 pm

After adjusting out the ENSO, AMO, solar and volcano impacts (according to a regression model which I have been running for 6 years now),
… the NCDC data would only be the second highest year on record and we have between 0.3C and 1.2C of warming yet to come by the year 2100.
http://s4.postimg.org/5d3eobh0d/NCDC_Warming_2014_to_2100.png
Hadcrut4 produces very similar results, second warmest, 0.3C to 1.2C yet to come etc,
http://s15.postimg.org/jdx6oqdbf/Hadcrut4_Warming_2014_to_2100.png
The lower troposphere temps, however, show much lower warming to date numbers (indicating there are unjustified adjustments in the surface temperature records) and the lower troposphere is actually supposed to be warming at 1.3 times as fast as the surface (the tropical troposphere hotspot) but it is actually the opposite. The lapse rate is changing or the surface temperature records are actually doubly adjusted out of whack. Take your pick. That is what the numbers say. Warming to date, 0.45C, warming yet to come by 2100, 0.55C.
http://s8.postimg.org/mx3q7hx1x/UAH_RSS_Had_AT_Warming_2100_Dec_2014.png
No disasters can come from 0.3C, 0.55C or 1.2C of further warming.

Pamela Gray
January 17, 2015 5:08 pm

So what you are saying Bob is that NOAA’s number crunching has (let’s see if I can kinda sound like Leif) NOT made an elephant’s trunk wriggle but they said it did anyway.
Ultimate fail this time NOAA. Ultimate fail. Sounds like NOAA has drank the cool aid of post modern science. Ignore gold standard measures of significance. Instead you use WORDS to determine significance. Right? Does this mean that statisticians are unnecessary and not welcomed at your table?
NOAA?
NOAA?
Ferris?
Ferris Bueller??????

January 17, 2015 5:10 pm

Very good charts, Bill. Thanks.

Eamon Butler
January 17, 2015 5:27 pm

From Climate Audit, regarding the ever increasing overheating discrepancies between models and observations. It notes that 2014 was the fourth highest in recorded history and five of the largest warm discrepancies occurred in the last six years.
My recollection of the beginning of 2014, there was very severe freezing cold temps. I seem to remember that all States saw snow and all five of the Great lakes froze and remained frozen well into Feb./Mar. It was quite a severe winter. Where did all this ”warmest year ever” come from? I don’t remember much reports of exceptional warmth at any time throughout the year.
Eamon.

January 17, 2015 5:28 pm

Thanks, Bob. Very good analysis!
I think this a case of “sour grapes” as a response to a super El Niño that would have resolved the stoppage of global warming into a continuation of it.
Though luck!

masInt branch 4 C3I in is
January 17, 2015 6:35 pm

WoW like really WoW.
So we started with , “Global Warming” then moved to “Climate Change” then moved to “Anthropogenic Global Warming”, them stumbled into “Carbon Anthropogenic Global Warming” and NOW we arrive at the “Human Pressure Critical Level”.
http://www.savingadvice.com/articles/2015/01/17/1032139_human-pressure-earth-danger-critical-level.html
Edo Emperor GISS Gavin Schmidt announces to President Obama, “We had hit a ‘Human Pressure Critical Level’ Point”.
Ha ha

logos_wrench
January 17, 2015 6:46 pm

Of course there are omissions. Grant applications don’t write themselves. Hype wins the day.

January 17, 2015 7:12 pm

I thought NOAA had resurrected the 1930s as the hottest decade not long ago?

rogerknights
January 17, 2015 7:58 pm

Bob–typos:

“That is not so to say that there were no elevated sea surface temperatures in specific parts of other ocean basins, but in general, those elevated temperatures in basins outside of the North Pacific had no impact on the record highs.”

Randy
January 17, 2015 9:41 pm

So, we broke the 2010 record (possibly) by .04. Also 2005. going by 2010 this is .01 a year. We are told we need to keep warming under 2 degrees total. At this rate it would take 200 years. If we go from 05 then it is over 400 years. Obviously I simplified it, and am skipping over many things but I dont see anything alarming here at all. This is getting silly.

Patrick.
Reply to  Bob Tisdale
January 18, 2015 4:38 am

It was not silly back in 1880. Just weather. The “weather” got silly…after 1988, politically that is. For most the weather was just…errrmmm…weather!

January 17, 2015 9:59 pm

averages do not exist and are really meaningless, example: john and henry have two apples. john has no apples, whereas henry has 2 apples. on average john and henry have 1 apple each. john is very hungry and wants an apple. but on average he has one apple and should thus stop complaining and stop asking henry for an apple. he should eat his one apple he has on average.
as for rounding. you can only round to the same decimal your data has. if it has 1 decimal you can only round the average to 1 decimal since you have no information about the 2nd decimal: 0.1, 0.10 0.0 is on average 0.0333333333 etc, and thus it must be reported as 0.0. However, the average of [0.1, 0.0, 0.0] is 0.06666666etc and must be report as 0.1. Those are the rules of rounding. period.

Reply to  soulsurfer
January 17, 2015 10:02 pm

edit of typo: first set of data is of course 0.1, 0.0 ,0.0

mpainter
Reply to  soulsurfer
January 18, 2015 2:49 am

There was a climate modeler who drowned ina river whose average depth was 2.79 feet.

Geoff
January 17, 2015 11:24 pm

According to my 1850 desk thermometer “Temp rate ” = 56F .” Sumrheat ” = 76F

Richard
January 18, 2015 12:13 am

The only reliable yearly global temperature data we have are the satellite temperatures from 1979, that is 37 years. The rest of the data is a manipulators paradise.
So when the climate-“science”-industry giants say “This also marks the 38th consecutive year (since 1977) that the yearly global temperature was above average.” what average are they talking about.
The only reliable yearly global average temperature is the 37 yer average and according to the satellite records 2000 and 2008 have been below average and the coldest year was 1984.
http://www.drroyspencer.com/
“The year 2014 was the warmest year across global land and ocean surfaces since records began in 1880.”
Not according to the satellite records. It was the third warmest since 1979.
“The annually-averaged temperature was 0.69°C (1.24°F) above the 20th century average of 13.9°C (57.0°F), easily breaking the previous records of 2005 and 2010 by 0.04°C (0.07°F)”
Again not according to the satellite records. According to them 2010 was not cooler by 0.04 C but warmer by 0.15 C. The difference between the 2 records is 0.19 C or in other words the difference between the satellite data and the climate-“science”-industry giants data is 475%.

richard
January 18, 2015 1:13 am

600 weather stations in Canada reduce to 35 , mostly based around urban areas. Makes you shudder when you think they are using estimations like that to clobber the west with huge taxes.
Anyway based on that , next time I am at the doctors I will get him to estimate my temp, seems like you can get hundredths of a degree accuracy from that.

richard
Reply to  richard
January 18, 2015 1:15 am

I am not the Richard above the Canada article who writes with fluidity.

Patrick.
Reply to  richard
January 18, 2015 4:35 am

Lookup “march of the thermometers”.

Richard
January 18, 2015 1:31 am

Thank you richard

richard verney
January 18, 2015 2:22 am

The fact is that all this information strongly supports the view that there has been a ‘pause’/’hiatus’/standstill’ to the warming these past 17 or so years. This is the important take home from the latest NOAA release.
Within margins of measurement errors (which I suspect are in any event out by an order of magnitude), it is not possible to detail whether 1998, 2005, 2010, 2013 or 2014 was the warmest years on record. There is no statistical difference in these.
The upshot of this is that there is no statistical significant temperature trend these past 17 years.
Notwithstanding the BAU rise in CO2, there has simply been no measurable warming these past 17 years and it appears (that for the time being) some plateau has been reached but no one knows what will happen next.
The latest data therefore rather than supporting AGW, undermines it.

Editor
January 18, 2015 10:15 am

I also seem to remember (this has not been mentioned for some time on WUWT) the Climategate e-mails and their content of “getting rid of the Medieval Warm Period” and the siting of themometers next to airport runways etc.
It does not matter which aspect of the “science” of AGW that is examined, it all boils down to lies and misrepresentation.

Richard M
January 18, 2015 3:09 pm

I wonder if anyone has compared the 2010 data when it was released with the 2014 data? I could be interesting to see if it has cooled.

herkimer
January 18, 2015 4:56 pm

Another significant omission in the summary NOAA press release was the fact the US 2014 ANNUAL TEMPERATURE according to NOAA was only the 33 warmest since 1895 or 2.73 degrees F below the record. The official Environment Canada figures will not be out for another two weeks but going by their seasonal figures, their annual 2014 departure will also be below a record . Thus it would be fair to say that the 2014 North American annual temperature will be l below any record . Now I wonder why this fact was omitted since the press release was for the American public and paid for by the public taxes.
I notice that BERKELEY EARTH did report on the US situation. They said,
4. For’the’contiguous’United’States,’2014’ranked’nominally’as’the’38th’warmest’
year’on’record’since’1850.”

January 18, 2015 6:24 pm

I see little discussion about all of the uncertainties in deriving a global temperature estimate from ground based temperature sensors in the first place. I don’t believe NOAA’s “0.09C” error bar is really representative of all of the uncertainties in the data and is quite misleading in that respect. I have not researched the full uncertainties involved, so I would like to see what others know about this subject since it is very pertinent to understanding the significance of changes in global temperature over time.
I have worked with temperature data for over 40 years primarily in relation to weather forecasting, air quality, and related data quality and representativeness. We now have a flood of surface temperature measurements at our fingertips as can be seen on the Wunderground map globally and these data help to highlight the large variations that can occur over small distances and due to sensor accuracy and exposure. We also now have a tremendous number of automated weather stations at airports with fairly uniform siting criteria and even the USCRN. The vast majority of these measurements are not used for determining global temperature over historical periods, in part because many of them did not exist even 20 years ago.
But I digress. Back to uncertainties in global temperature estimates based on near-ground-level sensor measurements. My gut feel for uncertainties includes the following.
1) Station temperature sensor measurement ~0.2C
2) Station representativeness of temperature measurement for a broader area ~0.5C
3) Selection and homogenization of the data ~0.5C
4) Lack of station coverage over much of the globe ~1C
Some of these uncertainties tend to cancel out by averaging and random nature over time. On the other hand, changes of representativeness over time, as in increasing urban heat island effects over time at many stations or station moves, may add to uncertainties over larger time scales. Changing sensor technology and siting criteria are also likely to add to uncertainty over larger time scales.
If I add up my numbered uncertainty estimates above, the total is over 2C. I realize that these uncertainties are probably not additive, but my best guess is that trends in temperature anomalies over time scales of 30 years or more are probably no more accurate that about 0.5C and quite possibly less accurate. Again, I am no expert in this matter and I would like to see how others feel about the full uncertainty in these global temperature estimates and trends over time.