New Normals (Climate Edition)

April 22, 2021 at 11:20 am

When the mete­o­rol­o­gist giv­ing you a weath­er fore­cast says, “This week’s tem­per­a­tures are going to be a lit­tle warmer than usual,” they are ref­er­enc­ing pub­lished obser­va­tions from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) U.S. Climate Normals. Every decade a new report is released that rolls the data for­ward slid­ing on a 30-year win­dow. So right now, the mete­o­rol­o­gist is com­par­ing today to the aver­age of 1981 to 2010. After the upcom­ing NOAA update in May, the com­par­i­son will be to the aver­age of 1991 to 2020. Your daily weath­er report is a shift­ing base­line of cli­mate change.

Alongside the ques­tions about when the new Normals will be released (first week of May), we’ve got­ten a lot of ques­tions about the Normals and glob­al warm­ing. Is glob­al warm­ing affect­ing the Normals? (Yes). Are the Normals adjust­ed to “sub­tract out” glob­al warm­ing? (No.) So the new nor­mal reflects our chang­ing cli­mate? (Yes). Then how do we keep track of what used to be nor­mal? (Different analyses.)

So what hap­pens when you step back from the short sight­ed Normals and start doing that “dif­fer­ent analy­ses?” (I know, I know — thir­ty years is short sight­ed? Yes. In the grand scheme of plan­e­tary sci­ence and mil­lions of years, it’s a blip. We must think big­ger.) You don’t have to look far because you can com­pare each update of the Normals start­ing from the first peri­od of 1901–1930. Now with a cen­tu­ry in the books, things look pret­ty bad.

Map of U.S Annual Temperature Compared to 20th-Century Average, Most areas are 1℉ warmer, large areas have already increased 2℉ in the last century, NOAA climate data, climate change

Annual aver­age tem­per­a­tures have risen 2°F in much of the U.S.

Everywhere in the U.S. is warmer now than dur­ing the 20th century.

Precipitation is get­ting pushed to the extremes. Areas are 12.5% wet­ter or drier.

Planting zones are shift­ing north­ward and up elevations.

The plant­i­ng zone maps empha­sized a key point about the Normals and cli­mate change: the once-per-decade update means these prod­ucts grad­u­al­ly come to reflect the “new nor­mal” of cli­mate change caused by glob­al warm­ing. What’s nor­mal today is often very dif­fer­ent than what was nor­mal 50 or 100 years ago.

Happy Earth Day!

(via kot­tke)

3.6 Million Years

April 12, 2021 at 3:00 pm

While falling down the Thwaites Glacier hole this morn­ing, there was more cli­mate change news released last week. The num­bers are star­tling, dead­en­ing, and make me stum­ble to find words. We made mil­lion year changes in just one hun­dred. We’ve reshaped the world and don’t even know — or can imag­ine — how yet.

The atmos­pher­ic bur­den of CO2 is now com­pa­ra­ble to where it was dur­ing the Mid-Pliocene Warm Period around 3.6 mil­lion years ago, when con­cen­tra­tions of car­bon diox­ide ranged from about 380 to 450 parts per mil­lion. During that time sea level was about 78 feet high­er than today, the aver­age tem­per­a­ture was 7 degrees Fahrenheit high­er than in pre-industrial times, and stud­ies indi­cate large forests occu­pied areas of the Arctic that are now tundra. 

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Research
Global monthly mean carbon dioxide, December 2020 414.49ppm, two charts showing increases in CO2, chart one is from 2016-2020, chart two is from 1980-2020