August Temperature Up a Little from July
NOTE: This is the seventeenth monthly update with our new Version 6.0 dataset. Differences versus the old Version 5.6 dataset are discussed here. Note we are now at “beta5” for Version 6, and the paper describing the methodology is back to the journal editors from peer review.
The Version 6.0 global average lower tropospheric temperature (LT) anomaly for August 2016 is +0.44 deg. C, up a little from the July, 2016 value +0.39 deg. C (click for full size version):
The global, hemispheric, and tropical LT anomalies from the 30-year (1981-2010) average for the last 20 months are:
    YEAR    MO   GLOBE   NHEM.   SHEM.   TROPICS
    2015    01   +0.30   +0.44   +0.15   +0.13
    2015    02   +0.19   +0.34   +0.04   -0.07
    2015    03   +0.18   +0.28   +0.07   +0.04
    2015    04   +0.09   +0.19   -0.01   +0.08
    2015    05   +0.27   +0.34   +0.20   +0.27
    2015    06   +0.31   +0.38   +0.25   +0.46
    2015    07   +0.16   +0.29   +0.03   +0.48
    2015    08   +0.25   +0.20   +0.30   +0.53
    2015    09   +0.23   +0.30   +0.16   +0.55
    2015    10   +0.41   +0.63   +0.20   +0.53
    2015    11   +0.33   +0.44   +0.22   +0.52
    2015    12   +0.45   +0.53   +0.37   +0.61
    2016    01   +0.54   +0.69   +0.39   +0.84
    2016    02   +0.83   +1.17   +0.50   +0.99
    2016    03   +0.73   +0.94   +0.52   +1.09
    2016    04   +0.71   +0.85   +0.58   +0.94
    2016    05   +0.55   +0.65   +0.44   +0.72
    2016    06   +0.34   +0.51   +0.17   +0.38
    2016    07   +0.39   +0.48   +0.30   +0.48
    2016    08   +0.44   +0.55   +0.32   +0.50
The July-August pause in cooling as La Nina approaches is unusual compared to the few other dissipating El Nino events in the satellite period of record; recent weeks’ ENSO predictions from CPC have suggested the coming La Nina won’t be as stong as previously forecast. Also, warmth elsewhere is offsetting cooling in the tropical Pacific, keeping global average temperatures up; the CFSv2 model average surface temperature for August as compiled at Weatherbell.com was +0.42 deg. C.
To see how we are now progressing toward a record warm year in the satellite data, the following chart shows the average rate of cooling for the rest of 2016 that would be required to tie 1998 as warmest year in the 38-year satellite record:

Based upon this chart, as we enter the home stretch, it now looks like a horse race to see whether 2016 will or won’t exceed 1998 as a new record-warm year (since the satellite record began in 1979).
The “official” UAH global image for August, 2016 should be available in the next several days here.
The new Version 6 files (use the ones labeled “beta5”) should be updated soon, and are located here:
Lower Troposphere: http://vortex.nsstc.uah.edu/data/msu/v6.0beta/tlt/uahncdc_lt_6.0beta5.txt
Mid-Troposphere:  http://vortex.nsstc.uah.edu/data/msu/v6.0beta/tmt/uahncdc_mt_6.0beta5.txt
Tropopause:  http://vortex.nsstc.uah.edu/data/msu/v6.0beta/ttp/uahncdc_tp_6.0beta5.txt
Lower Stratosphere: http://vortex.nsstc.uah.edu/data/msu/v6.0beta/tls/uahncdc_ls_6.0beta5.txt

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