Trassey Slievenaman DCNN 9245 – Now you see it, now you don’t. Met Office “Excellent”

52.20557 -6.00618 Met Office CIMO Assessed 4 Installed 1/1/1985

Trassey Slievenaman was installed in 1985 but not at its above location. Met Office public records do NOT show any relocation nor give any re-identification to indicate any move. The reality is that its location has been has been significantly changed from a poor low grade one to a completely unacceptable one. However, the Met office also classify this site as one of their thirty top quality ones in the entire UK – ” La crème de la crème,” or is it really no better than turned milk? Hera are the facts.

The World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) in association with the International Standards Organisation (ISO) formed the Commission for Instrumentation and Meteorological Observation (CIMO) to establish international comparative standards for the acceptable location for “Climate Reporting” weather stations. I link to these regulations under every review I do.

Despite the Met Office being a major contributor to the establishment of these international standards, they continued to use their own unique assessment procedure of sites being rated – Excellent, Good, Satisfactory and Unsatisfactory. Unlike CIMO, the exact details of these “standards” are not clearly defined to the public. Instead the Met Office seems to expect everyone to just accept them marking their own homework. This is their web page providing nothing more than excuses for their own failings to meet adequate standards https://weather.metoffice.gov.uk/learn-about/how-forecasts-are-made/observations/observation-site-classification. An interesting point to note regarding these standards is that the Met Office recording database system automatically assumes all sites are CIMO Class 1 and Met Office “Excellent” as they revealed to me in my review of Hastings

“Dear Mr Sanders

Thank you very much for your enquiry. This has highlighted an issue in our database. My original recorded inspection data was ‘CIMO Class 4’ (and I’ve reviewed the exposure diagram, which confirms), with the Stevenson screen exposure recorded as ‘Acceptable’ (and Satisfactory overall, taking into account the CIMO 4 rating).

The default CIMO rating is 1 on our site visit application (and Met O ‘Excellent’), so it looks like the class hasn’t been entered correctly, human error.

I trust this answers your question.

Sincerely

Angus Bruce BSc MIET

Regional Network Manager (South East England)”

This database default system was further shown to be inaccurate when I contested the rating of Edenbridge as Class 1 with it being “downgraded” to a more correct Class 4 though I would personally claim it should be Class 5. Having such errors publicly exposed I genuinely feel the Met office should have taken steps to correct the accuracy of their database as having to make further corrections would be more embarrassing. In September last year under Freedom of Information request I obtained the full listing of all Met office CIMO assessed weather stations by their unique Met Office assessed grade. Below is the entry for Trassey Slievenaman.

Trassey Slievenaman is clearly rated as “Excellent” – or is that yet another database error? Firstly the just 3 metre radius circled area is clearly in deep shade

Below is the 2021 Streetview image.

Revealed above is yet another dismally bad amateur garden screen compromised by proximity to the house, there is actually a car in the frame, overgrown hedging, heavy shading and it can only ever be classified as an unregulated Class 5. But then things get even worse. Below is the previous Streetview image from 2011.

So where is the Stevenson Screen? It clearly is not there nor anywhere visible within the grounds of the house. As stated above there are no public records of a re-location – thus started a long search! Eventually this revealed the answer 125 metres to the rear, in a field behind barns.

As luck had it it was also just captured on Street view in the distance in this shot.

This original site would also not have made Class 4 either, the hedging running hard alongside from the south-south east to north-north west would immediately cause unacceptable wind sheltering and sun shading and the area was then a continuously change cropped “market garden” area failing natural ground cover.

In summary, the current site is unacceptable, or put in Met Office parlance “Unsatisfactory”. It has been moved from an almost equally bad site that would have been unquestionably climatologically quite different to present but neither re-identification nor notification of the move was made. The Met Office, however, claims a wrong Class 4 grading but that does assume (quite possibly wrongly) that the Met Office even actually knows of the move at all. It could well be they do not know and the observer may simply have done that themselves to reduce their morning walk. The “Excellent” rating is obviously wrong and if not would be a damning indictment of Met Office standards. If, as I suspect, it is yet another “default error” it shows just how “sloppy” the Met Office data recording of even site basics so regularly is.

via Tallbloke’s Talkshop

https://ift.tt/zXRJ3pd

May 23, 2025 at 07:10AM

UK Sea Temperatures Soar

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

h/t Ian Magness

Today’s misinformation from the BBC:

Temperatures in the seas around the UK and Ireland have soared in the past week with some areas now 4C warmer than normal, with potential implications for marine life and people going swimming.

One of warmest Springs on record is driving the surge, as high temperatures and weak winds warm the top layer of the ocean.

Marine heatwaves in the UK are thought to be a relatively new phenomenon but they are expected to increase in frequency and intensity.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c7533y6l3k0o

I don’t think sea temperatures of 13C rank as a “heatwave”, certainly not if you fell into it!

But the misinformation lies in the statement that “One of warmest Springs on record is driving the surge”. What is driving the surge is the record amounts of sunshine seen so far the spring. It is the sun which warms the seas, not climate change. And it is the same sunshine that has brought a warm spring on land too.

And sunny weather also brings light winds, which prevent that warm surface water from mixing with the colder water below.


Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

via Watts Up With That?

https://ift.tt/js37nMd

May 23, 2025 at 04:07AM

Maternity hospital evacuated after large solar panel fire

By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Ian Cunningham

 

BBC report on a solar panel fire at a Bristol hospital yesterday:

 

Pregnant women were moved to safety earlier after a large fire broke out on the roof of a maternity hospital.

Emergency services were called to reports of a fire involving solar panels at St Michael’s Hospital, on Southwell Street in Bristol, shortly before 16:30 BST.

Mothers-to-be and babies were moved outside of the building, supported by midwives who brought out milk and fruit. The fire was extinguished within an hour and the hospital reopened by 19:00.

Jess Hutchinson, 22, whose waters had broken, said it was "scary" hearing the fire on the roof, where a number of solar panels have been destroyed by the flames.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/clygn1p8nwzo

 

Whatever the exact cause, it is a reminder of the danger of putting large quantities of inflammable electrical equipment on the roof of a public building.

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

https://ift.tt/pBkUQXK

May 23, 2025 at 03:46AM

JP MorganChase dismisses claims of prioritizing Green energy over customers

CFACT to the big bank: "Your Energy Supply Financing Ratio claims you fund $1.29 in green energy for every $1 in high-carbon projects. Why are you prioritizing that ratio instead of funding based on ROI, energy reliability, or client demand?"

via CFACT

https://ift.tt/5LNSV8u

May 23, 2025 at 03:43AM