Data from the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment scanning radiometer aboard the NOAA-9 operational meteorological satellite are used to investigate the spatial variability of outgoing longwave radiation (OLR). Daily and monthly radiation maps at 2.5-degrees latitude-longitude scale are used as a basis for the study. The regions of greatest variability are in the tropics and subtropics. Storm tracks such as the South Pacific convergence zone appear as regions of high OLR variability. Spatial spectra in longitude show two regimes of OLR. At large scales (wavenumbers less than 6), the spatial spectrum is flat, For wavenumbers greater than 10, the spectra decrease as wavenumber to the -3 power. The spatial spectrum of daily anomalies from the mean is a strong function of latitude and season, with interesting features. Correlations of daily anomalies from the monthly mean decrease exponentially in latitude but have a damped-wave structure in longitude. The spatial variability of the daily maps, as measured by degree variance, have 10 times the power at degree 24 than the monthly maps, but at scales between 1 and 10, the degree variance is practically the same for daily as for monthly.