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As regular readers know, I have more photographs and charts of weather stations on my computer than I have pictures of my family. A sad commentary to be sure, but necessary for what I do here.

Steve Goddard points out this NASA GISS graph of the Annual Mean Temperature data at Godthab Nuuk Lufthavn (Nuuk Airport) in Greenland. It has an odd discontinuity:

Source data is here

The interesting thing about that end discontinuity is that is is an artifact of incomplete data. In the link to source data above, GISS provides the Annual Mean Temperature (metANN) in the data, before the year 2010 is even complete:

Yet, GISS plots it here and displays it to the public anyway. You can’t plot an annual value before the year is finished. This is flat wrong.

But even more interesting is what you get when you plot and compare the GISS “raw” and “homogenized” data sets for Nuuk, my plot is below:

Looking at the data from 1900 to 2008, where there are no missing years of data, we see no trend whatsoever. When we plot the homogenized data, we see a positive artificial trend of 0.74°C from 1900 to 2007, about 0.7°C per century.

When you look at the GISS plotted map of trends with 250KM smoothing, using that homogenized data and GISS standard 1951-1980 baseline, you can see Nuuk is assigned an orange block of 0.5 to 1C trend.

Source for map here

So, it seems clear, that at least for Nuuk, Greenland, their GISS assigned temperature trend is artificial in the scheme of things. Given that Nuuk is at an airport, and that it has gone through steady growth, the adjustment applied by GISS is in my opinion, inverted.

The Wikipedia entry for Nuuk states:

With 15,469 inhabitants as of 2010, Nuuk is the fastest-growing town in Greenland, with migrants from the smaller towns and settlements reinforcing the trend. Together with Tasiilaq, it is the only town in the Sermersooq municipality exhibiting stable growth patterns over the last two decades. The population increased by over a quarter relative to the 1990 levels, and by nearly 16 percent relative to the 2000 levels.

Nuuk population growth dynamics in the last two decades. Source: Statistics Greenland

Instead of adjusting the past downwards, as we see GISS do with this station, the population increase would suggest that if adjustments must be applied, they logically should cool the present. After all, with the addition of modern aviation and additional population, the expenditure of energy in the region and the changing of natural surface cover increases.

The Nuuk airport is small, but modern, here’s a view on approach:

Closer views reveal what very well could be the Stevenson Screen of the GHCN weather station:

Here’s another view:

The Stevenson Screen appears to be elevated so that it does not get covered with snow, which of course is a big problem in places like this. I’m hoping readers can help crowdsource additional photos and/or verification of the weather station placement.

[UPDATE: Crowdsourcing worked, the weather station placement is confirmed, this is clearly a Stevenson Screen in the photo below:

Thanks to WUWT reader “DD More” for finding this photo that definitively places the weather station. ]

Back to the data. One of the curiosities I noted in the GISS record here, was that in recent times, there are a fair number of months of data missing.

I picked one month to look at, January 2008, at Weather Underground, to see if it had data. I was surprised to find just a short patch of data graphed around January 20th, 2008:

But even more surprising, was that when I looked at the data for that period, all the other data for the month, wind speed, wind direction, and barometric pressure, were intact and plotted for the entire month:

I checked the next missing month on WU, Feb 2008, and noticed a similar curiosity; a speck of temperature and dew point data for one day:

But like January 2008, the other values for other sensors were intact and plotted for the whole month:

This is odd, especially for an airport where aviation safety is of prime importance. I just couldn’t imagine they’d leave a faulty sensor in place for two months.

When I switched the Weather Underground page to display days, rather than the month summary, I was surprised to find that there was apparently no faulty temperature sensor at all, and that the temperature data and METAR reports were fully intact. Here’s January 2nd, 2008 from Weather Underground, which showed up as having missing temperature in the monthly WU report for January, but as you can see there’s daily data:

But like we saw on the monthly presentation, the temperature data was not plotted for that day, but the other sensors were:

I did spot checks of other dates in January and February of 2008, and found the same thing: the daily METAR reports were there, but the data was not plotted on graphs in Weather Underground.The Nuuk data and plots for the next few months at Weather Underground have similar problems, as you can see here:

But they gradually get better. Strange. It acts like a sensor malfunction, but the METAR data is there for those months and seems reasonably correct.

Since WU makes these web page reports “on the fly” from stored METAR reports in a database, to me this implies some sort of data formatting problem that prevents the graph from plotting it. It also prevents the WU monthly summary from displaying the correct monthly high, low, and average temperatures. Clearly what they have for January 2008 is wrong as I found many temperatures lower than the monthly minimum of 19 °F they report for January 2008, for example, 8°F on January 17th, 2008.

So what’s going on here?

There’s no sensor failure.

We have intact hourly METAR reports (the World Meteorological Organization standard for reporting hourly weather data for January and February 2008.

We have erroneous/incomplete presentations of monthly data both on Weather Underground and NASA GISS for the two months of Jan Feb 2008 I examined.

What could be the cause?

WUWT readers may recall these stories where I example the impacts of failure of the METAR reporting system:

GISS & METAR – dial “M” for missing minus signs: it’s worse than we thought

Dial “M” for mangled – Wikipedia and Environment Canada caught with temperature data errors.

These had to do with missing “M’s” (for minus temperatures) in the coded reports, causing cold temperatures like -25°C becoming warm temperatures of +25°C, which can really screw up monthly average temperatures with one single bad report.

Following my hunch that I’m seeing another variation of the same METAR coding problem, I decided to have a look at that patch of graphed data that appeared on WU on January 19th-20th 2008 to see what was different about it compared to the rest of the month.

I looked at the METAR data for formatting issues, and ran samples of the data from the times it plotted correctly on WU graphs, versus the times it did not. I ran the METAR reports through two different online METAR decoders:

http://www.wx-now.com/Weather/MetarDecode.aspx

http://heras-gilsanz.com/manuel/METAR-Decoder.html

Nothing stood out from the tests with the decoder I did. The only thing that I can see is that some of the METAR reports seem to have extra characters, like /// or 9999, like these samples, the first one didn’t plot data on WU, but the second one did an hour later on January 19th:

METAR BGGH 191950Z VRB05G28KT 2000 -SN DRSN SCT014 BKN018 BKN024 M01/M04 Q0989 METAR BGGH 192050Z 10007KT 050V190 9999 SCT040 BKN053 BKN060 M00/M06 Q0988

I ran both of these (and many others from other days in Jan/Feb) through decoders, and they decoded correctly. However, that still leaves the question of why Weather Underground’s METAR decoder for graph plotting isn’t decoding them correctly for most of Jan/Feb 2008, and leaves the broader question of why GISS data is missing for these months too.

Now here’s the really interesting part.

We have missing data in Weather Underground and in GISS, for January and February of 2008, but in the case of GISS, they use the CLIMAT reports (yes, no ‘e”) to gather GHCN data for inclusion into GISS, and final collation into their data set for adjustment and public dissemination.

The last time I raised this issue with GISS I was told that the METAR reports didn’t effect GISS at all because they never got numerically connected to the CLIMAT reports. I beg to differ this time.

Here’s where we can look up the CLIMAT reports, at OGIMET:

http://www.ogimet.com/gclimat.phtml.en

Here’s what the one for January 2008 looks like:

Note the Nuuk airport is not listed in January 2008

Here’s the decoded report for the same month, also missing Nuuk airport:

Here’s February 2008, also missing Nuuk, but now with another airport added, Mittarfik:

And finally March 2008, where Nuuk appears, highlighted in yellow:

The -8.1°C value of the CLIMAT report agrees with the Weather Underground report, all the METAR reports are there for March, but the WU plotting program still can’t resolve the METAR report data except on certain days.

I can’t say for certain why two months of CLIMAT data is missing from OGIMET, why the same two months of data is missing from GISS, or why Weather Underground can only graph a few hours of data on each of those months, but I have a pretty good idea of what might be going on. I think the WMO created METAR reporting format itself is at fault.

What is METAR you ask? Well in my opinion, a government invented mess.

When I was a private pilot (which I had to give up due to worsening hearing loss – tower controllers talk like auctioneers on the radio and one day I got the active runway backwards and found myself head-on to traffic. I decided then I was a danger to myself and others.) I learned to read SA reports from airports all over the country. SA reports were manually coded teletype reports sent hourly worldwide so that pilots could know what the weather was in airport destinations. They were also used by the NWS to plot synoptic weather maps. Some readers may remember Alden Weatherfax maps hung up at FAA Flight service stations which were filled with hundreds of plotted airport station SA (surface aviation) reports.

The SA reports were easy to visually decode right off the teletype printout:

From page 115 of the book “Weather” By Paul E. Lehr, R. Will Burnett, Herbert S. Zim, Harry McNaught – click for source image

Note that in the example above, temperature and dewpoint are clearly delineated by slashes. Also, when a minus temperature occurs, such as -10 degrees Fahrenheit, it was reported as “-10″, not with an “M”.

The SA method originated with airmen and teletype machines in the 1920′s and lasted well into the 1990′s. But like anything these days, government stepped in and decided it could do it better. You can thank the United Nations, the French, and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) for this one. SA reports were finally replaced by METAR in 1996, well into the computer age, even though it was designed in 1968.

From Wikipedia’s section on METAR

I’ve always thought METAR coding was a step backwards.

Here is what I think is happening

METAR was designed at a time when teletype machines ran newsrooms and airport control towers worldwide. At that time, the NOAA weatherwire used 5 bit BAUDOT code (rather than 8 bit ASCII) transmitting at 56.8 bits per second on a current loop circuit. METAR was designed with one thing in mind: economy of data transmission.

The variable format created worked great at reducing the number of characters sent over a teletype, but that strength for that technology is now a weakness for today’s technology.

The major weakness with METAR these days is the variable length and variable positioning of the format. If data is missing, the sending operator can just leave out the data field altogether. Humans trained in METAR decoding can interpret this, computer however are only as good as the programming they are endowed with.

Characters that change position or type, fields that shift or that may be there one transmission and not the next, combined with human errors in coding can make for a pretty complex decoding problem. The problem can be so complex, based on permutations of the coding, that it takes some pretty intensive coding to handle all the possibilities.

Of course in 1968, missed characters or fields on a teletype paper report did little more than aggravate somebody trying to read it. In today’s technological world, METAR reports never make it to paper, they get transmitted from computer to computer. Coding on one computer system can easily differ from another, mainly due to things like METAR decoding being a task for an individual programmer, rather than a well tested off the shelf universally accepted format and software package. I’ve seen all sorts of METAR decoding programs, from ancient COBOL, to FORTRAN, LISP, BASIC, PASCAL, and C. Each program was done differently, each was done to a spec written in 1968 for teletype transmission, and each computer may run a different OS, have a program written in a different language, and different programmer. Making all that work to handle the nuances of human coded reports that may contain all sorts of variances and errors, with shifting fields presence and placement, is a tall order.

That being said, NOAA made a free METAR decoder package available many years ago at this URL:

http://www.nws.noaa.gov/oso/metardcd.shtml

That has disappeared now, but a private company is distributing the same package here:

http://limulus.net/mdsplib/

This caveat on the limulus web page should be a red flag to any programmer:

Known Issues

Horrible function naming.

Will probably break your program.

Horrible variable naming.

I’ve never used either package, but I can say this: errors have a way of staying around for years. If there was an error in this code that originated at NWS, it may or may not be fixed in the various custom applications that are based on it.

Clearly Weather Underground has issues with some portion of it’s code that is supposed to plot METAR data, coincidentally, many of the same months where their plotting routine fails, we also have missing CLIMAT reports.

And on this page at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR/UCAR), we have reports of the METAR package failing in odd ways, discarding reports:

>On Tue, 2 Mar 2004, David Larson wrote: > >> >>Robb, >> >>I've been chasing down a problem that seems to cause perfectly good >>reports to be discarded by the perl metar decoder. There is a comment >>in the 2.4.4 decoder that reads "reports appended together wrongly", the >>code in this area takes the first line as the report to process, and >>discards the next line. >>

Here’s another:

On Fri, 12 Sep 2003, Unidata Support wrote: > > ------- Forwarded Message > > >To: support-decoders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >From: David Larson <davidl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >Subject: perl metar decoder -- parsing visibility / altimeter wrong > >Organization: UCAR/Unidata > >Keywords: 200309122047.h8CKldLd027998 > > > The decoder seems to mistake the altimeter value for visibility in many > non-US METARs.

So my point is this. METAR is fragile, and at the world’s premier climate research center, it seems to have problems that suggest it doesn’t handle worldwide reports yet it appears to be the backbone for all airport based temperature reports in the world, which get collated to GHCN for climate purposes. I think the people that handle these systems need to reevaluate and test their METAR code.

Even better, let’s dump METAR in favor of a more modern format, that doesn’t have variable fields and variable field placements requiring the code to not only decode the numbers/letters, but also the configuration of the report itself.

In today’s high speed data age, saving a few characters from the holdover of teletype days is a wasted effort.

The broader point is; our reporting system for climate data is a mess of entropy on so many levels.

UPDATE:

The missing data can be found at the homepage of DMI, the Danish Meteorological Institute http://www.dmi.dk/dmi/index/gronland/vejrarkiv-gl.htm “vælg by” means “choose city” choose Nuuk to get the numbers monthly back to january 2000.

Thanks for that. The January 2008 data is available, and plotted below at DMI’s web page.

So now the question is, if the data is available, and a prestigious organization like DMI can decode it, plot it, and create a monthly average for it, why can’t NCDC’s Peterson (who is the curator of GHCN) decode it and present it? Why can’t Gavin at GISS do some QC to find and fix missing data?

Is the answer simply “they don’t care enough?” It sure seems so.

UPDATE: 10/4/10 Dr. Jeff Masters of Weather Underground weighs in. He’s fixed the problem on his end:

Hello Anthony, thanks for bringing this up; this was indeed an error in our METAR parsing, which was based on old NOAA code: /* Organization: W/OSO242 – GRAPHICS AND DISPLAY SECTION */ /* Date: 14 Sep 1994 */ /* Language: C/370 */ What was happening was our graphing software was using an older version of this code, which apparently had a bug in its handling of temperatures below freezing. The graphs for all of our METAR stations were thus refusing to plot any temperatures below freezing. We were using a newer version of the code, which does not have the bug, to generate our hourly obs tables, which had the correct below freezing temperatures. Other organizations using the old buggy METAR decoding software may also be having problems correctly handling below freezing temperatures at METAR stations. This would not be the case for stations sending data using the synoptic code; our data plots for Nuuk using the the WMO ID 04250 data, instead of the BGGH METAR data, were fine. In any case, we’ve fixed the graphing bug, thanks for the help. REPLY: Hello Dr. Masters. It is my pleasure to help, and thank you for responding here. One wonders if similar problems exist in parsing METAR for generation of CLIMAT reports. – Anthony

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