The shift in the Central Netherlands Temperature in 1987

My first peer reviewed paper is out. The full title is: A Late 20th Century European Climate Shift: Fingerprint of Regional Brightening? First author is Jos de Laat of KNMI. The idea for the paper was mine, but Jos certainly did most of the work. The paper is freely available on the website of the journal Atmospheric and Climate Sciences.

For some years I noticed just by visual inspection that in the eighties there seems to be a jump  in the Dutch temperature time series. I asked Jos to have a look at it. He spent some time selecting the ‘best’ method to determine whether this shift is ‘real’. This so called change-point analysis procedure concluded that indeed there is a very significant step change of about 1 degree Celsius in the Central Netherlands Temperature time series in 1987.

The next step was to look for the spatial pattern of the shift. We also used investigated other datasets like the satellite series UAH and RSS. We found the shift all over western Europe and in all the different datasets we studied as can be seen in our figure 2:

Spatial pattern of the shift in ’87/’88 in different datasets

Dimming and brightening
We regard the documentation of this European wide shift in 1987/1988 as the main result of our paper. Now of course the next logical question is what caused this shift and is it consistent with greenhouse warming? The shift coincides with a change in the North Atlantic Oscillation, which we show in our figure 4:

However when the NAO gets back to average values, the temperature in Europe stays at the higher level. Several papers (see our references) have shown that up to 50% of the recent warming in Europe could be the result of brightening, i.e. more sunlight reaching the earth surface. Global dimming (between the fifties and the eighties) and subsequent brightening (starting in the eighties in Europe, supposedly as a result of environmental regulations) are well established  by measurements all around the world. Martin Wild and Atsumu Ohmura of ETH have been publishing a lot about this topic.

The years 1984-1986 were quite cold in Europe, several years after the shift in the NAO were quite warm. This period coincides with the change from dimming to brightening. We therefore argue in the paper that the shift could be considered as a fingerprint of European brightening.

So it is certainly too early to state that the shift we have ‘found’ is inconsistent with greenhouse warming. The generally accepted view is that dimming compensated for the greenhouse forcing in the 50-ies to the 80-ies. As a result the warming due to greenhouse gases didn’t become ‘visible’. Then in the eighties the air in Europe became cleaner, more sunlight reached the ground (the amount of extra sunlight is huge, in the order of 10 W/m2). As a result Europe has been warming twice as much as the global average (1.5 degrees instead of globally 0.8).

However, on the other hand, since 1992 there has been no further warming in The Netherlands, as is shown in this graph on the blog of Rob de Vos:

This leads to the intriguing fact that the warming in The Netherlands seems to be limited to a very short period between 1987 and the early 90-ies. After that both greenhouse forcing and brightening still increased but this didn’t result in further warming in The Netherlands.

[Update: Comments by Jos Hagelaars and Rob de Vos make clear this is not correct. There still is some warming after 1992, in the order of 0.2-0.3 degree/decade.]

Climate Dialogue
Some people might find it surprising that a Dutch scientist of KNMI publishes a paper with a Dutch science writer (who is regarded as a critic of the IPCC consensus). For me of course it is not. I met Jos for the first time when I worked on my hockey stick article in late 2004. Throughout the years we have had many interesting discussions about climate science. He is also part of the advisory board of Climate Dialogue, the discussion platform that KNMI, PBL and I have set up last year. This paper is written in the spirit of a climate dialogue you could say and I applaud KNMI for accepting this somewhat unusual cooperation.

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