Reposted from Awesome Weather Facts
By Chris Martz | July 26, 2019
Follow @ChrisMartzWX
It’s summer, temperatures are hot - sometimes record hot - and as usual, climate alarmism reaches record highs, and climate activists have a field day with it by fear mongering rather than reasoning with facts and data. Every week, various weather events end up getting caught in the spokes of the wheel of climate; it’s an endless cycle. Rinse, wash, repeat. This time, it’s the [second] European heatwave.
A Bit of Historical Perspective
While countries like the Netherlands, Germany, and Belgium have recorded their hottest temperatures on record this week, Paris’s record high of 108.7°F (42.6°C) on Thursday, July 25 made international headlines and consequently sparked climate insanity.¹
The graph below (Figure 1) shows the maximum temperature in Paris, France for each year since 1900.² As indicated by the red trendline, there has been a noticeable increase in the annual maximum temperature in Paris over the long run, however, the trend is not alarming.
Paris’s previous hottest temperature record stood for nearly 72 years.³ On July 28, 1947, the city reached 104.7°F (40.4°C).³ Paris’s high of 108.7°F (42.6°C) on Thursday broke the old record by 4°F (2.2°C), which is an incredible feat by any stretch of the imagination. To break an all-time temperature record by 4°F in summer, let alone tie it, is extremely difficult to do, even with global warming.
Figure 1. Paris, France annual maximum temperature since 1900.
The 1947 heatwave was an incredible one in Europe and it’s forever stitched in the memories of elders.
In Paris, the heatwave lasted for 12 days (July 22 through August 2) with highs consistently at or above 90°F (32.2°C).³ Two days were at or above 100°F (37.8°C), and four were at or above 95°F (35°C).³
What really stuck out to me when comparing maximum temperatures this summer with 1947 is that maximum temperatures seem to trace those of 1947 (Figure 2). It’s quite interesting and odd.
Figure 2. Paris, France daily maximum temperature for the summer of 1947 and 2019.
Is Climate Change to Blame?
Like most scientists, I agree that climate change - both natural fluctuations or man-made forcings like land use and urbanization - should cause weather patterns and the intensity and/or frequency of extreme weather or weather-related events to change.
It’s indeed possible that the warmer atmosphere today as compared to the 1980s may have made this heatwave slightly more intense. However, nobody knows for sure because heatwaves have always occurred; some are just worse than others. It’s summer.
While this heatwave is the latest poster child for the “ecological breakdown,” there is a natural explanation for this heatwave, as with all other weather events.
There’s been a persistent weather pattern that’s causing this bake fest. A large area of high pressure is stationed over Europe and an area of low pressure is situated off of the coast of Ireland.⁴ The wind flow around the pressure centers are drawing in air from the south, which is blowing hot, Saharan air into Europe (Figure 3).⁴ This natural process occurs with or without 415 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Figure 3. European surface map. – Met Office.
The air over France at the time of Paris’s record high was relatively dry (Figure 4), and as all weather hobbyists or meteorologists should know, dry air heats up faster than saturated air. Had the dew points (and thus relative humidity) been higher Thursday afternoon, the record high may not have been set!
Figure 4. 2-meter relative humidity in France. – weathermodels.com.
It’s also worth pointing out that Paris, like any other large city, is a massive urban heat island (UHI).
When land is developed, urban infrastructure takes place of land that was once covered with vegetation like grass and particularly forests.⁵ Development limits the amount of plant transpiration (evaporation that cools plant leaves and air temperatures).⁵ Buildings like factories, skyscrapers, houses, and shops, not to mention automobiles and dark urban infrastructure like roads and black roofs absorb and retain more heat than grassy surfaces or forested areas.⁵
All of the heat generated by these objects and surfaces make its way into the atmosphere above the city adding supplemental heat that’s not natural.⁵
I’ve seen some Tweets from a few meteorologists and other people who claim that the UHI is only or mostly effective at night.
While there is some truth to that (as most of the warming seen in the U.S., for instance, is with overnight temperatures), NOAA has created maps from various U.S. cities of both high and low temperatures.⁶ The map below (Figure 5) is of Baltimore, Maryland’s 3:00 p.m. afternoon temperature on August 29, 2018.⁶ Notice how the city is noticeably warmer than its more rural surroundings, even in the afternoon! I know this from personal experience because I live in Northern Virginia, not too far from Baltimore and Washington, D.C.
Figure 5. Baltimore, MD UHI effect.
My Conclusion
While it’s incredible that Paris exceeded their record high on Thursday, it’s important that we look not only at trends, but also give a bit of perspective.
One can not make a preconceived notion on one daily temperature measurement.
You have to first look at whether or not a record temperature occurred in an urban area, then see what the upper air pattern is doing, and lastly look at trends and previous years with similar atmospheric conditions.
Skeptics who use cold and snow as evidence that global warming is a hoax are always reminded by climate activists that weather and climate are vastly different, and they’d be correct.
So, why then do activists blame a single record high temperature, let alone a summer heatwave on climate change? That I can not answer. It seems to me that it’s “do as I say, not as I do.”
The bottom line is this: heatwaves happen, it’s summer, and it’s hot.
REFERENCES
[1] Leister, Eric. “Paris breaks all-time high temperature as deadly heat wave grips Europe.” AccuWeather. July 25, 2019. Accessed July 26, 2019. https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/scorching-heat-produces-all-time-record-highs-in-belgium-netherlands-as-western-europe-swelters-under-heat-wave/70008886.
[2] “Annual Maximum of Monthly Maximum of Daily Maximum Temperature.” KNMI Climate Explorer. Accessed July 26, 2019. http://climexp.knmi.nl/data/xgdcnFR000007150_max12_anom_max1_anom.dat.
[3] “Maximum Temperature PARIS/LE BOURGET.” KNMI Climate Explorer. Accessed July 26, 2019. http://climexp.knmi.nl/data/xgdcnFR000007150.dat.
[4] “Surface pressure charts.” Met Office. July 26, 2019. Accessed July 26, 2019. https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/maps-and-charts/surface-pressure.
[5] “Satellites Pinpoint Drivers of Urban Heat Islands in the Northeast.” NASA. Accessed July 26, 2019. https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/heat-island-sprawl.html.
[6] Herring, David. “Citizen Scientists take to the streets to map the hottest places in ten U.S. cities.” NOAA Climate.gov. July 24, 2019. Accessed July 26, 2019. https://www.climate.gov/news-features/features/citizen-scientists-take-streets-map-hottest-places-ten-us-cities.
Posted by Chris Martz Weather at
4:28 PM




I guess it was hot climate that caused the Tour de France to stop the race 0n Friday and shorten the race today. Too much hot ICE.
It was a mud flow caused by a storm with heavy hail.
Snow in the Alps at 9000 ft is not uncommon.even in July or August.
Excellent post, Chris Martz Weather!
And, of course, the MSM and TWC failed to mention the 35F drop in only 48 hours. The Tour de France ended a day early because the mountain road washed out with hail and wet snow this weekend. Yep, climate change.
I sincerely hope that Paris manages to increase this record breaking temperature by 0.10°C every year for the next 40 years. And all during that time Paris’s winters starts 1 days earlier and ends 1 day later, while the minimum winter temperatures slide down at rate of 0.15°C per year.
Let them bleat about summer temperatures then.
Regarding Figure 5, the color coded map of Baltimore as of 3 PM 8/29/2018: This does not look like air temperature measured 2 meters above the surface. I don’t see a way to have an air temperature measuring device scan the 2 meter above surface level of a city like that, especially with that level of resolution.
As for high temperatures on that day in that area according to the National Weather Service, as reported in archived CF6 preliminary monthly climate data:
Philadelphia International Airport: 95 degrees F
Greater Wilmington (DE) Airport: 94 degrees F
Baltimore (downtown / “inner harbor” ?): 96 degrees F
Washington DC National Airport: 94 degrees F
Washington DC Dulles Airport: 94 degrees F
Regarding fig 5 (I don’t know how that was obtained), the cool areas are the forested/vegetated areas clearly seen on Google Maps. Obvious that vegetated areas are significantly cooler than concrete/asphalt/roofs, etc. The UHIE is a no-brainer & temps from those areas are biased upward.
https://www.google.com/maps/@39.3091029,-76.5925889,35441m/data=!3m1!1e3
If global warming is, in fact, global, how is it that places seem to be stuck in the middle of “Climate Normals?”
charts of Yakima Washington
Many cold records including subzero temperatures – in July – in Russia (a big place). Is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/record-cold-in-russia-2/
Clear evidence of NASA tampering with the USA temperature record ironing flat previous cool and warm extremes to make current warming look falsely exceptional – is this climate change?
https://notrickszone.com/2019/07/27/us-justice-also-needs-to-focus-on-fabricated-nasa-climate-dossier-that-aims-to-frame-co2-citizens/
https://notrickszone.com/2019/07/23/more-data-shenanigans-at-nasa-unadjusted-data-get-whole-new-definition-no-longer-raw-but-now-quality-controlled/
2019 ship of fools runs into anomalous 3m thick ice in the Baffin inlets, on 14 July. Is this climate change?
https://notrickszone.com/2019/07/19/2019-climate-ship-of-fools-run-into-3-meter-thick-ice-baffin-inlets-mid-summer-ice-extent-no-trend-in-50-years/
Anomalous snow in July in Poland – is this climate change?
https://notrickszone.com/2019/07/14/surprise-july-snow-falls-in-poland-june-temperature-trends-see-no-rise-across-canada-iceland/
In Peru one of the coldest winters in 50 years and fears of flu epidemic. Is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/peru-one-of-the-most-intense-winters-in-almost-50-years/
In Idaho hay price jumps on scarce supply due to cold wet spring – is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/idaho-hay-price-jump-and-short-supply/
Anomalous 2.5 foot snow closes Argentina’s Bariloche airport – is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/2%C2%BD-ft-of-snow-shuts-down-argentina-airport/
Strongest ever summer jet stream in NH when warming climate models predict weakening jet stream: is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/strongest-summer-jet-stream-to-hit-pacific-northwest-ever/
15 cold records broken in Queensland Australia: is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/fifteen-cold-records-broken-in-queensland/
Millions of acres not planted in US and China due to anomalous cold and rain in spring: is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/millions-of-acres-in-the-us-will-not-be-planted-this-year/
Record cold in Slovakia in July; is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/record-cold-in-slovakia-2/
Record cold in Northwest Russia in July 2019: is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/cold-record-in-northwestern-european-russia/
Record cold for all of Hungary – is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/record-cold-in-hungary/
Record cold in Brazil, 2019: is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/record-cold-in-brazil/
Would it surprise you Phil if it turned out there were far more record highs than record lows?
Phil Salmon
“Record cold for all of Hungary – is this climate change?
https://www.iceagenow.info/record-cold-in-hungary/”
*
The very best of this more or less ridiculous page has been a comment posted by:
” Lyn Jenkins [Mr], Wales ,UK.
July 12, 2019 at 11:03 am
Well, we have just returned from Genoa, N Italy.
Temps for a week from 29th June 2019 to 5th July were around 90 to 95 Fahrenheit.
We had those temps in Marseilles, Palma Majorca, Ibiza, Naples, Livorno and Genoa. ”
Very British humor.
*
Btw: here are the ten last anomalies wrt mean of 81-10 for the average of all HU stations of GHCN:
2018 9 2.06
2018 10 2.62
2018 11 3.05
2018 12 0.93
2019 1 0.56
2019 2 2.74
2019 3 3.02
2019 4 1.27
2019 5 -1.87
2019 6 3.75
Yeah. Record cold for all of Hungary!
We’ll see in a few days how July behaved. What would you bet?
I think you are talking about the the City of Paris, which is a relatively tiny part of the whole metropolitan area and corresponds to the mid 19th century Paris. Greater Paris has grown enormously in the last seventy years.
Metropolitan Area population has doubled between 1950 and 2020
Over time there have been different definitions for the Paris urban or Metroploitan area, but is is safe to say that it did not shrink….
“It’s indeed possible that the warmer atmosphere today as compared to the 1980s may have made this heatwave slightly more intense. ”
almost true by definition
“No”
That is not the conclusion the author came to at all. The way I read it, he was saying “I don’t know”, despite a whole article which admitted a long-term trend in maximum temperature increase and claimed that the science suggested this would lead to an increased probability of such heat waves.
I blame all those wind turbines in the Pyrenees and the Massive Central for the heat in Paris. If the wind was allowed to blow uninterrupted, the faster more constant air flow across France would ensure a moderated temperature regime. 🙂
Rod Evans
Then please do not forget to blame “all those wind turbines” along the Spanish coastal lines for the horribly cold period in Spain during May & June 🙂.
Very hot in the UK on Thursday, not sure what accuracy a car’s thermometer reads to, but it hit 37.5C. Certainly when you opened the car door, it felt like getting off the plane at Cairo airport!
Stayed hot too, so not just the Sun, heating things up.
However, by Saturday morning, 17.5C.
Raining steadily now, normal British summer has resumed.
London:
Thursday 38 C
Friday 28 C
Saturday 19 C
Is this climate change?
No !
It’s weather change, stu..d !
The Tour De-France was stopped yesterday, because of a heavy snow storm.
Hail storm. Hail storms in summer are not because it was cold.
Hail storm.
No. It was a hail storm.
These are mostly a consequence of the meeting of hot and cold air masses in front of mountains.
Sorry for my bad english, I am french.
In 1947, the temperature was measured in the old radiation shield of 1870 (Named “Montsouris”) :
http://education.meteofrance.fr/documents/10192/92670/21993-43.jpg/185x250x.pagespeed.ic.beoaoHXUBZ.jpg
http://education.meteofrance.fr/ressources-pour-les-enseignants/observer-et-mesurer/l-abri-meteo#
The median error of this radiation shield, is +2° with this weather condition and strong radiation in summer, up +3.5° (Tx) in the comparison of Météo France (MF) with a humid and not hot summer.
The Paris Montsouris park is automatically watered (not in 1947) and on record day it was watered in the morning. An old study said watering cooled the Tx by -0.5° on average in the summer at Montsouris.
http://www.meteo-paris.com/site/images/station_meteo_centenaire_omm_06.jpg
http://www.meteo-paris.com/actualites/2018-annee-la-plus-chaude-a-paris-et-besancon-18-decembre-2018.html
The problem in this station is too closed, with bad natural ventilation of the site and the shelter with trees that cut the wind. The masks shadows cool some of the Tx. The ICU is for the evening and the night temperatures, the Tn, not for the Tx in this park.
Another MF station in Paris -St Maur des Fossés recorded 43.6° (more closed that Montsouris)
Oh yes it is!
so are the records in Netherlands, Germany, Belgium and the UK!
and no, they weren’t rogue weather stations either (I happened to visit Cambridge Botanic Gardens just 2 weeks ago and the site there is just as it has been for a hundred years)
Apparentlly, 2002/3 are missing.
Missing data for the year 2003 in Paris
For Charles the Moderator & Chris Martz
I can understand that in the US nobody feels the need to have a closer look at graphs showing temperatures in France, let alone to remember in which years the country was hit by heat waves.
Nevertheless, I invite you both to look at the KNMI graph in Fig. 1:
You clearly can see an interesting hole in the graph, covering some years somewhere within 2000 / 2005.
This is no wonder. I suppose that like many other institutions, climate information web sites and blogs, KNMI obtains data from NOAA (GHCN monthly V3, now V4).
I use GHCN daily:
ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/ghcn/daily/
And there you see only one station for Paris, France in the station directory file ‘ghcnd-stations.txt’:
FR000007150 48.8231 2.3367 75.0 PARIS/LE BOURGET 07150
While, in the GHCN daily inventory file ‘ghcnd-inventory.txt’ you see for the station id ‘FR000007150’
FR000007150 48.8231 2.3367 TMAX 1900 2018
FR000007150 48.8231 2.3367 TMIN 1900 2018
FR000007150 48.8231 2.3367 TAVG 1983 2018
what indicates that Le Bourget has TMIN/TMAX since 1900, the data file itself
ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/ghcn/daily/all/FR000007150.dly
perfectly explains the KNMI hole: there is no TMIN/TMAX data available for this station between Jan 2001 and Sep 2004. And the lack of daily data is of course the reason for the same lack of data in the monthly series GHCN V3/V4.
Even Berkeley Earth shows a hole in its monthly data for the Paris station in the Parc Montsouris:
http://berkeleyearth.lbl.gov/auto/Stations/TAVG/Figures/13958-TAVG-Raw.png
Thus, 2003, the year which has very probably experienced the heaviest heat wave since temperature measurement in France, is clearly visible at many places in France, but… not in Paris.
To give an idea of how 2003 behaves in comparison with 1947, here is in the following a bit of stat coming from a descending sort of the TMAX values obtained from GHCN daily (there was also a heat wave in 1911 with about 40000 deaths, but at that time only 5 stations reported data).
12 of the top 20 for France were measured in 2003; 47 in the top 100, and 296 in the top 1000, reported by 44 stations.
For 1947 the numbers are: 3, 11 and 65, reported by 18 stations.
Thus, even if the measured temperatures’ averages were similar (38.8 °C in 1947, 38.6 in 2003), the 2003 heat period lasted longer on average in this top 1000 (6.7 days/station in 2003 vs. 3.7 in 1947).
We will see in a few weeks how 2019 behaves in comparison with 2003 and 1947. Imho, it will stay far far below 2003.
Regards
J.-P. D.
I would be interested to have a robust and reliably skeptical study of whether and, if so, how global warming would make this stalled front significantly hotter (over standard meteorological factors). Until then, I will question beliefs such as this one: “Like most scientists, I agree that climate change - both natural fluctuations or man-made forcings like land use and urbanization - should cause weather patterns and the intensity and/or frequency of extreme weather or weather-related events to change.” In this case agree = belief, without the scientific mechanics.
The difference between 28th July 1947 and 25th July 2019 are shown below and why the event was not due to climate change.
https://www.wetterzentrale.de/reanalysis.php?map=1&model=noaa&var=1&jaar=1947&maand=07&dag=28&uur=1200&h=0&tr=360&nmaps=24#mapref
https://www.wetterzentrale.de/en/reanalysis.php?map=1&model=cfsr&var=1&jaar=2019&maand=07&dag=25&uur=1200&h=0&tr=360&nmaps=24#mapref
The weather pattern introduced hot air moving up from North Africa on both days.
One difference occurred though where the isobars were tighter on the 2019 event due to low pressure off Ireland.
This brought stronger winds to the west of the high pressure system, bringing in increased hotter air further North and quicker into Europe. This window of opportunity for this energy moving north is limited to duration, so quicker flow makes the process more efficient. Hence, high pressure system slowly moving in different position after a short duration cuts the increased energy flow off.
Therefore the higher temperatures recorded were more related to this slight different weather pattern then any urbanisation difference during this time. Although one big influence on UHI usually not mentioned is the increase in the size of the buildings storing more energy that get slowly released during the day and especially at night.
Paris had mediocre maximum temperatures in 1976? Bullshit!
Hermit.Oldguy
Do you have kinda parallax problem?
The graph rather suggests 1977, and it’s correct, see top 5:
FR000007150 PARIS/LEBOURGET 1977 7 3 29.0
FR000007150 PARIS/LEBOURGET 1977 7 5 28.9
FR000007150 PARIS/LEBOURGET 1977 7 6 28.8
FR000007150 PARIS/LEBOURGET 1977 7 4 28.5
FR000007150 PARIS/LEBOURGET 1977 7 12 28.2
Heatwave / record cold?
Depends where you are…
https://electroverse.net/all-time-record-low-temperatures-tumble-in-northwest-russia/
It’s probably a case of the relatively well off squawking the most about a little discomfort
“Yes, the record was broken by an incredible amount; but hey, it’s Summer.”
Skepticism is fine, but not to the point where it becomes blinkered to the bias of people advocating it.
Fine: this Summer is just one data point, so to speak – but nothing in the above article actually debunked a global warming hypothesis.
Nice to see Griff and a few other like minded alarmists pretending there wasn’t any snow involved in halting the de France. Little defensive maybe? Most of the media, of course, did likewise….I didn’t know about the snow until today.
copy
3 days ago – Stage 19 of the Tour de France has ended in dramatic fashion with racing called to a halt due to a landslide plus ice and snow on the road. General … wielrenn…/tour-de-france/2019/etappe-19/ pic.twitter.com/b8BenVros9.