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© The Age & Sydney Morning Herald

Urban heat island effect

#UN #UNEP #UNESCO
SDG 3 SDG 4 SDG 13 SDG 15

Urban heat island (UHI) manifests as the temperature rise in built-up urban areas relative to the surrounding rural countryside, largely because of the relatively greater proportion of incident solar energy that is absorbed and stored by man-made materials. The direct impact of UHI can be significant on both daytime and night-time temperatures, and the indirect impacts include increased air conditioning loads, deteriorated air and water quality, reduced pavement lifetimes, and exacerbated heat waves. Modifying the thermal properties and emissivity of roofs and paved surfaces and increasing the vegetated area within the city are potential mitigation strategies. A quantitative comparison of their efficacies and costs suggests that so-called cool roofs are likely the most cost-effective UHI mitigation strategy. However, additional research is needed on how to modify surface emissivities and dynamically control surface and material properties, as well as on the health and socioeconomic impacts of UHI,(PEP,2015)
In fact urban heat island has impact in health and social like on human health is manifested in different outcomes, with death as the extreme; the heat wave of 1995 in Chicago is an example. Others are expected to be manifested in the form of heightened incidence of allergic respiratory diseases such as asthma resulting from increased air pollutants as well as impact on economically
But sources of urban heat human activities like construction of roaf, road.

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