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Friday, May 3, 2019
BIG NEWS – Verified by NOAA – poor weather station siting leads to artificial long term warming
"I’ve been saying for years that surface temperature measurements (and
long term trends) have been affected by encroachment of urbanization on
the placement of weather stations used to measure surface air
temperature, and track long term climate. In doing so we found some hilariously bad examples of climate science in action, such as the official USHCN climate monitoring station at the University of Arizona, Tucson: USHCN weather station in a parking lot. University of Arizona, Tucson I have published on the topic in the scientific literature, and found
this to be true based on the science we’ve done of examining the USHCN
and applying the siting methodology of Leroy 2010.
In Fall et al, 2011 we discovered
that there was a change to the diurnal temperature range (DTR). It
decreased where stations had been encroached upon, because of the heat
sink effect of man-made materials (asphalt, concrete, bricks, etc.) that
were near stations.
For layman readers that don’t know what diurnal variation is, it is
the daily variation of temperature due to the variation of incoming
solar radiation from rotation of the earth on its axis.
Here is what we found; in the best-sited stations, the diurnal
temperature range in the lower 48 states has no century-scale trend, but
the poorly sited stations had a reduction in DTR:
These results suggest that the DTR
in the United States has not decreased due to global warming, and that
analyses to the contrary were at least partly contaminated by station
siting problems. Indeed, DTR tended to increase when temperatures were
fairly stable and tended to decrease when temperatures rose.
Initial funding was provided this year by the USRCRN Program for a
multi-year experiment to better understand the thermal impacts of
buildings with parking lots on air temperature measurements. A site near
the offices of ATDD will be instrumented to measure accurately the air
temperature and other variables at multiple distances from the potential
thermal heat source, corresponding to the distances from thermal
sources used in classifying USCRN stations (Figure 7). This study will have several applied and practical outcomes.
Determining the downwind range of influence of a typical building will
be important for understanding built environment impacts on surface air
temperature measurements. Other measurements of radiation and heat
fluxes will help illuminate the physical processes responsible for any
detected heat transfers. Finally, this information will help influence
future USCRN/USRCRN siting decisions. Additional insight is being sought
by collaborating with National Weather Service (NWS) and National
Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) on extensions of the basic
project. This effort promises to be greatly useful to
understanding climate quality temperature measurements and how they can
be influenced by the station site environment.
They have finally published. (h/t to Steve Mosher) Guess what? Like
I’ve said all along (and been excoriated for saying so) they found
exactly what we did.
Abstract (bold mine)
A field experiment was performed in Oak Ridge, TN, with four
instrumented towers placed over grass at increasing distances (4, 30,
50, 124, and 300 m) from a built-up area. Stations were aligned in such a
way to simulate the impact of small-scale encroachment on temperature
observations. As expected, temperature observations were warmest
for the site closest to the built environment with an average
temperature difference of 0.31 and 0.24 °C for aspirated and unaspirated
sensors respectively.Mean aspirated temperature differences were greater during the evening (0.47 °C) than day (0.16 °C). This was particularly true for evenings following greater daytime solar insolation (20+ MJDay−1)
with surface winds from the direction of the built environment where
mean differences exceeded 0.80 °C. The impact of the built environment
on air temperature diminished with distance with a warm bias only
detectable out to tower-B’ located 50 meters away.
The experimental findings were comparable to a known case of urban
encroachment at a U. S. Climate Reference Network station in Kingston,
RI. The experimental and operational results both lead to reductions in
the diurnal temperature range of ~0.39 °C for fan aspirated sensors.
Interestingly, the unaspirated sensor had a larger reduction in DTR of
0.48 °C. These results suggest that small-scale urban encroachment
within 50 meters of a station can have important impacts on daily
temperature extrema (maximum and minimum) with the magnitude of these
differences dependent upon prevailing environmental conditions and
sensing technology.
And, we’ve published at AGU on the effects of siting on 30 year temperature trends:
The quality of temperature station siting matters for temperature trends
30 year trends of temperature are shown to be lower, using
well-sited high quality NOAA weather stations that do not require
adjustments to the data.
NEW STUDY OF NOAA’S U.S. CLIMATE NETWORK SHOWS A LOWER
30-YEAR TEMPERATURE TREND WHEN HIGH QUALITY TEMPERATURE STATIONS
UNPERTURBED BY URBANIZATION ARE CONSIDERED Figure 4 – Comparisons of 30 year trend for compliant Class 1,2 USHCN
stations to non-compliant, Class 3,4,5 USHCN stations to NOAA final
adjusted V2.5 USHCN data in the Continental United States
EMBARGOED UNTIL 13:30 PST (16:30 EST) December 17th, 2015
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – A new study about the surface temperature record
presented at the 2015 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union
suggests that the 30-year trend of temperatures for the Continental
United States (CONUS) since 1979 are about two thirds as strong as
officially NOAA temperature trends. Figure
3 – Tmean Comparisons of well sited (compliant Class 1&2) USHCN
stations to poorly sited USHCN stations (non-compliant, Classes
3,4,&5) by CONUS and region to official NOAA adjusted USHCN data
(V2.5) for the entire (compliant and non-compliant) USHCN dataset. Using NOAA’s U.S. Historical Climatology Network, which comprises
1218 weather stations in the CONUS, the researchers were able to
identify a 410 station subset of “unperturbed” stations that have not
been moved, had equipment changes, or changes in time of observations,
and thus require no “adjustments” to their temperature record to account
for these problems. The study focuses on finding trend differences
between well sited and poorly sited weather stations, based on a WMO
approved metric Leroy (2010)1for classification and
assessment of the quality of the measurements based on proximity to
artificial heat sources and heat sinks which affect temperature
measurement. An example is shown in Figure 2 below, showing the NOAA
USHCN temperature sensor for Ardmore, OK.
Figure 1 – USHCN Temperature sensor located on street corner in Ardmore, OK in full viewshed of multiple heatsinks.
Dare I call this new NOAA paper vindication?
Or, by doing so will the rabble of global warming zealots led by
schmucks like Dr. Michael Mann find yet another reason to label me a
“Koch funded science denier”?"
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