Record High Temperatures Far Outpace Record Lows Across U.S.

November 12, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Spurred by a warming climate, daily record high temperatures occurred twice as often as record lows over the last decade across the continental United States, new research shows.

The ratio of record highs to lows is likely to increase dramatically in coming decades if emissions of greenhouse gases continue to climb.

Results of the research, by authors at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colo., Climate Central, The Weather Channel, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), has been accepted for publication in the American Geophysical Union journal Geophysical Research Letters.

"Climate change is making itself felt in terms of day-to-day weather in the United States," says NCAR scientist Gerald Meehl, the lead author. "The ways these records are being broken show how our climate is already shifting."

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), NCAR's sponsor, the U.S. Department of Energy, and Climate Central.

"This intriguing study provides new evidence of climate change," says Steve Nelson, NSF program director for NCAR. "And it's change that's affecting our daily lives."

If temperatures were not warming, the number of record daily highs and lows being set each year would be approximately even.

Instead, for the period from January 1, 2000, to September 30, 2009, the continental United States set 291,237 record highs and 142,420 record lows, as the country experienced unusually mild winter weather and intense summer heat waves.

A record daily high means that temperatures were warmer on a given day than on that same date throughout a weather station's history.

The authors used a quality control process to ensure the reliability of data from thousands of weather stations across the country, while looking at data over the past six decades to capture longer-term trends.

This decade's warming was more pronounced in the western United States, where the ratio was more than two to one, than in the eastern United States, where the ratio was about one-and-a-half to one.

The study also found that the two-to-one ratio across the country as a whole could be attributed more to a comparatively small number of record lows than to a large number of record highs.

This indicates that much of the nation's warming is occurring at night, when temperatures are dipping less often to record lows.

This finding is consistent with years of climate model research showing that higher overnight lows should be expected with climate change.

In addition to surveying actual temperatures in recent decades, Meehl and his co-authors turned to a sophisticated computer model of global climate to determine how record high and low temperatures are likely to change during the course of this century.

The modeling results indicate that, if nations continue to increase their emissions of greenhouse gases in a "business as usual" scenario, the U.S. ratio of daily record high to record low temperatures would increase to about 20-to-1 by mid-century and 50-to-1 by 2100.

The mid-century ratio could be much higher if emissions rose at an even greater pace, or it could be about 8-to-1 if emissions were reduced significantly, the model showed.

The authors caution that such predictions are, by their nature, inexact.

Climate models are not designed to capture record daily highs and lows with precision, and it remains impossible to know future human actions that will determine the level of future greenhouse gas emissions.

The model used for the study, the NCAR-based Community Climate System Model, correctly captured the trend toward warmer average temperatures and the greater warming in the West, but overstated the ratio of record highs to record lows in recent years.

Tags:
global warming,
science,
energy policy and climate change

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YES! foxnews has another angle to ramp up the anger of its viewers - "Oh my, oh dear, those awful scientists are scaring us out of all our hard earned money with dire predictions that humans are changing the environment! Don't listen to them, only us. Drive your Hummers! Pollute in excess! And don't forget to buy the new Glen Beck book, or our ‘I Hate Environmentalists’ bumper stickers, because we will use the profits responsibly."

"THEY" just care about profiting from scaring people about Global Warming - not like "US," who is in it for the welfare and betterment of humanity.

OH WAIT - "they" and "us" are both on the same planet fist fighting each other to extinction instead of using our hands to dig in and WORK on solutions!

But that would call for each side of the global warming debate to use rational and not greed, anger or scare tactics. Rational/balanced/normal ACTION on climate issues would benefit ALL of us.

Like how YOU could recycle more and waste less, or are you too busy at the soup kitchen feeding the poor? Please tell me how YOU are helping humanity? Or is that someone else's job? Someone who can make a profit from it? Like Gore and foxnews?

http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/ This blog seems RATIONAL on climate issues (that means it looks at both sides of the equation before leaping to a conclusion).

Conclusion: be rational in your examination of larger issues like climate change.

Also ask yourself, if so-and-so isn't doing such a hot job when stating climate facts, who should I promote? And what can I do to help all of us?

Paul of CO 1:18PM December 01, 2009

Keep drinking the Kool-Aid, NSF! Even as the scare mongers' scientific and objective credentials become more and more tarnished, you cling to any so-called "evidence" which you claim supports your flawed models. Amazing how "Global" warming is more pronounced in such a limited land mass as the Western United States as opposed to the Eastern US.

Hope you won't consider punching me out for having the audacity to point out that the emperor wears no clothes.

M Conlon of NY 11:04AM November 30, 2009

This article was written before the hackers exposed all the phony research of millionaire, ALGORE's minions.

Maybe the science wasn't "settled" after all. The climate's changes may not be so novel as recently supposed.

R.L. Schaefer of CA 12:42PM November 24, 2009

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