By Kirye
and Pierre
The mean July, 2021, temperature data for Tokyo and Hachijojima island are now available from the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA).
Plotting Tokyo’s July mean temperature going back to 1993 shows there’s been no rise over the period.
Data source: JMA
July Hachijojima
The mean July, 2021, temperature for the RURAL volcanic Japanese island of Hachijojima – in the middle of the ocean some 287 kilometers south of Tokyo, was 25.3°C. We plot the data for July going back to 1926:
Data source: JMA
Here there’s been no July warming in close to 100 years.
Summer Hachijojima
Next, looking at the plot of the latest data up to 2020, we see that summers at Hachijojima have indeed NOT been warming:
Data source: JMA
As the above data show, there has been virtually no trend at all over the past 80 years.
Rural vs urban Japan
When we plot a comparison of the mean daily maximum temperatures at both these locations, we clearly see the urban heat island effect at work:
Tokyo’s maximum daily temperature has been rising much faster than that of Hachijojima. CO2 is not what’s at work here.
Well done.
Hachijojima: Is this the weather station: 33.11279, 139.7766
near the runway.
[…] Related: Tokyo Sees No July Warming In 3 Decades…Hachijojima No July Warming In Almost 100 Years! […]
“Tokyo’s maximum daily temperature has been rising much faster than that of Hachijojima. CO2 is not what’s at work here.”
Hold on there, buster. All these city people expiring CO2, there’s your climate change right there, buddy! Have you never heard of micro-climates?!?!?!