Global Inequality in Cooling from Urban Green Spaces and its Climate Change Adaptation Potential

07/19/2023
by   Yuxiang Li, et al.
0

Heat extremes are projected to severely impact humanity and with increasing geographic disparities. Global South countries are more exposed to heat extremes and have reduced adaptation capacity. One documented source of such adaptation inequality is a lack of resources to cool down indoor temperatures. Less is known about the capacity to ameliorate outdoor heat stress. Here, we assess global inequality in green infrastructure, on which urban residents critically rely to ameliorate lethal heat stress outdoors. We use satellite-derived indicators of land surface temperature and urban green space area to quantify the daytime cooling capacity of urban green spaces in the hottest months across  500 cities with population size over 1 million per city globally. Our results show a striking contrast with an about two-fold lower cooling capacity in Global South cities compared to the Global North (2.1 degrees Celsius vs. 3.8 degrees Celsius). A similar gap occurs for the cooling adaptation benefits received by an average urban resident (Global South 1.9 degrees Celsius vs. North 3.6 degrees Celsius), i.e., accounting for relative spatial distributions of people and urban green spaces. This cooling adaptation inequality is attributed to the discrepancies in urban green space quantity and quality between Global North and South cities, jointly shaped by natural and socioeconomic factors. Our analyses suggest vast potential for enhancing outdoor cooling adaptation while reducing its global inequality through expanding and optimizing urban green infrastructure.

READ FULL TEXT

page 2

page 22

page 26

page 27

page 30

page 35

page 36

page 38

research
03/17/2022

Revealing the determinants of gender inequality in urban cycling with large-scale data

Cycling is an outdoor activity with massive health benefits, and an effe...
research
11/25/2020

Mega Regional Heat Patterns in US Urban Corridors

Current literature suggests that urban heat-islands and their consequenc...
research
12/05/2020

Urban Heat Islands: Beating the Heat with Multi-Modal Spatial Analysis

In today's highly urbanized environment, the Urban Heat Island (UHI) phe...
research
05/24/2022

GLOBUS: GLObal Building heights for Urban Studies

Urban weather and climate studies continue to be important as extreme ev...
research
11/03/2020

Developing High Quality Training Samples for Deep Learning Based Local Climate Classification in Korea

Two out of three people will be living in urban areas by 2050, as projec...
research
01/28/2021

Jane Jacobs in the Sky: Predicting Urban Vitality with Open Satellite Data

The presence of people in an urban area throughout the day – often calle...
research
12/08/2017

Crime prediction through urban metrics and statistical learning

Understanding the causes of crime is a longstanding issue in researcher'...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset