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How we build these numbers

Every figure on this site is traceable to a public, free, public-domain or openly-licensed dataset — no proprietary data, nothing behind a paywall. This page explains where each kind of number comes from and how we turn it into the charts and tables you see. The "Methodology & sources" panel on each city page names the exact station and source for that city.

Measured vs. modelled

The most important distinction on the site is whether a number was measured at a weather station or modelled.

Sources

NOAA U.S. Climate Normals 1991–2020

The official 30-year reference for U.S. stations, published by NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information — monthly temperature, precipitation and snowfall normals. The prior 1981–2010 product is also loaded; the difference between the two periods drives the warming-delta table.

ncei.noaa.gov →

Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA)

Official 1991–2020 climate normals for Japan — monthly mean, maximum and minimum temperature and precipitation, from the JMA principal-station and AMeDAS observation networks. Used directly for Japanese cities served by a JMA station.

jma.go.jp →

INMET — Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia (Brazil)

Official 1991–2020 climate normals for Brazil, from INMET's network of conventional climate stations. Used directly for Brazilian cities served by an INMET station.

portal.inmet.gov.br →

SENAMHI — Servicio Nacional de Meteorología e Hidrología (Peru)

Official 1991–2020 climate normals for Peru. We use only SENAMHI's full-period stations — those with a complete 24–30 year record over the window; shorter-period station averages are excluded. SENAMHI publishes maximum and minimum temperature, and the mean is taken as their average.

senamhi.gob.pe →

CONAGUA / SMN — Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (Mexico)

Official 1991–2020 climate normals for Mexico, published per station by the Servicio Meteorológico Nacional under CONAGUA. Used directly for Mexican cities served by an SMN station.

smn.conagua.gob.mx →

WMO CLINO 1991–2020

The WMO Climatological Standard Normals — official 1991–2020 normals submitted by 141 national meteorological services and compiled by NOAA NCEI. They serve two roles here: an independent reference for cross-checking our other normals, and — for countries where official coverage is otherwise thin — a direct source of city normals.

ncei.noaa.gov →

NOAA GHCN-Daily & GSOD

Global daily station observations — the Global Historical Climatology Network (GHCN-Daily) and the Global Summary of the Day (GSOD). Where a station has no official normal, we compute its 1991–2020 normal from these daily records; the city page reports how many years of data went into it. They also feed the records and anomaly pages.

ncei.noaa.gov →

NASA POWER

Cloud cover, relative humidity, wind speed and solar radiation — a satellite-and-reanalysis climatology (MERRA-2 and related products). The standard global source for atmospheric variables that station networks do not measure.

power.larc.nasa.gov →

ERA5-Land reanalysis

The ECMWF ERA5-Land reanalysis, a ~9 km global grid of modelled climate fields. Used as the temperature and precipitation fallback for locations with no usable nearby station.

ecmwf.int →

Beck et al. Köppen-Geiger climate classification

The reference Köppen-Geiger maps (Beck et al. 2018, CC BY 4.0; and the 2023 V3 1901–2099 dataset used for the climate-drift pages). Each city's Köppen tag is computed from its 1991–2020 monthly normals using the standard Peel/Beck rule set.

gloh2o.org/koppen →

USDA 2023 Plant Hardiness Zone Map

The official U.S. gardening reference — each zone defined by the average annual extreme minimum temperature. Hosted by the PRISM Climate Group at Oregon State University.

prism.oregonstate.edu →

Methodology

Underlying datasets are in the public domain or openly licensed; redistribution and commercial use are permitted, with attribution to the original providers where their licence requires it. The providers are credited above.