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Effects of site change and urbanisation in the Beijing temperature series 1977–2006
111
Citations
21
References
2009
Year
EngineeringUrban Climate ImpactUrban WeatherSocial SciencesClimate ImpactRegional Climate ResponseClimate ChangesUrbanisationMicrometeorologyUrban MeteorologyClimate ChangeUrban EnvironmentMeteorologyGeographyPopulation MigrationUrban PlanningUrban LocationUrban Heat MitigationClimate DynamicsClimatologyUrban GeographySuburban LocationUrban AdaptationUrban ClimateSite Change
Abstract During 1977–1981 the Beijing (BJ) meteorological station was at a suburban location. In 1981 it was moved to a more urban location, but in 1997 it was subsequently moved back to the same suburban location. The daily BJ temperature series, together with those from 18 nearby stations, form a unique database for studying how site‐change and possible urbanisation influences affect climate changes at a local scale. The site‐change‐induced biases were quantified, between 0.43 and 0.95 °C, based on comparisons between multi‐year‐mean seasonal temperature anomalies at BJ and the mean of those from a cluster of nearby stations. The annual mean urban‐suburban difference was 0.81 °C around 1981 and 0.69 °C around 1997, indicating a growing urbanisation effect in the suburban compared to the downtown area. The linear warming trend in the adjusted (for site moves only) BJ temperature series during 1977–2006 was 0.78 °C/decade. Comparing with several rural and less‐urban sites, we suggest that the BJ records include an urbanisation‐related warming bias between 0.20 and 0.54 °C/decade, likely about 0.30 °C/decade, for the recent few decades. The climatic warming at BJ between 1977 and 2006 is likely, therefore, to be about 0.48 °C/decade. Caveats for using these estimates were discussed. Copyright © 2009 Royal Meteorological Society
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