NOAA: Global Ocean Surface Temperature Warmest on Record for June

Jeff Alberts's picture

Posted 08/01/2009 - 10:45 by Jeff Alberts

NOAA: Global Ocean Surface Temperature Warmest on Record for June

Some excerpts from the press release:

The world’s ocean surface temperature was the warmest on record for June, breaking the previous high mark set in 2005, according to a preliminary analysis by NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C. Additionally, the combined average global land and ocean surface temperature for June was second-warmest on record. The global records began in 1880.

Couple of things here. First, it shouldn't be much of a surprise to anyone that it's warmer now than it was 150 years ago. I think we're all glad it is.

Second, since the oceans are warmer, according to NOAA, it's pretty obvious that the oceans are warming the atmosphere, not the other way around.

The global land surface temperature for June 2009 was 1.26 degrees F (0.70 degree C) above the 20th century average of 55.9 degrees F (13.3 degrees C), and ranked as the sixth-warmest June on record.

Wow, I'm sure glad we're not near the "average". 55.9 F would suck in the summer. Of course, I'm not sure why the 20th century average is any more important than the 19th, 18th, 17th, etc.

NOAA doesn't come to any conclusions on this press release, but it really seems like useless information, especially the concept of a "global surface temperature". Some places warm, some places cool, some remain relatively static. And until NOAA and NWS address their surface stations for collecting temperature data, the land surface record is fairly meaningless.

I'm also curious as to why a half a degree C over 150 years is a big deal. The weekly variation in temperature in Western Washington over the last week was over 30 degrees F. There were no mass extinctions, no droughts, no floods, just hot, then cool.

Where's the catastrophe?

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