What does NASA GISTEMP Data for May 2017 tell us?

NASA maintains the GISS Surface Temperature Analysis (GISTEMP) data set, and so on a monthly basis there is an update.

What exactly is GISTEMP?

GISTEMP is an estimate of global surface temperature change.

They collect raw data files from NOAA GHCN v3 (meteorological stations), ERSST v4 (ocean areas), and SCAR (Antarctic stations). This is all then combined. They describe exactly how they combine it within a December 2010 publication (Hansen et al. 2010).

Roughly about the middle of each month they then issue an update. This not only includes data that relates to the previous month, but also, when appropriate, incorporates late reports and corrections for earlier months.

We just passed the middle of June, hence the May 2017 data is now available.

The raw data is a table that measures Temperature anomalies – how much warmer or colder it is than normal.

Now that of course opens up an interesting question of what “normal” means. For the GISS analysis, normal is defined as the average over the 30-year period 1951-1980. This is not a universal definition, it is simply a choice made for the GISS dataset.

Does that mean they have fudged the data to yield specific results? No, because regardless of what base period you pick, the trends remain the same.

May 2017 – 2nd Warmest May in 137 years of measurements

On 15th June they posted the following update for May 2017 …

May 2017 was the second warmest May in 137 years of modern record-keeping, according to a monthly analysis of global temperatures by scientists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York.

Last month was 0.88 degrees Celsius warmer than the mean May temperature from 1951-1980. The two top May temperature anomalies have occurred during the past two years. 2016 was the hottest on record, at 0.93 degrees Celsius warmer than the May mean temperature.

May 2017’s temperature was 0.05 degrees Celsius cooler than May 2016. It was just 0.01 degrees Celsius warmer than the third warmest May, which occurred in 2014.

Graphs

Derived from the MERRA2 reanalysis over 1980-2015. We show how much warmer each month of the GISTEMP data is than the annual global mean. Graph data: The 1980-2015 seasonal cycle anomaly in MERRA2 along with the 95% uncertainties on the estimate of the mean.
Land-ocean temperature index, 1880 to present, with base period 1951-1980. The solid black line is the global annual mean and the solid red line is the five-year lowess smooth. The blue uncertainty bars (95% confidence limit) account only for incomplete spatial sampling. [This is an update of Fig. 9a in Hansen et al. (2010).]

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