Current:Home > reviewsHow mapping 'heat islands' can help cities prepare for extreme heat -ProfitEdge
How mapping 'heat islands' can help cities prepare for extreme heat
View
Date:2025-04-15 20:25:31
Climate change, driven primarily by burning fossil fuels, pushed temperatures so high last year that scientists were astounded when 2023 became the hottest year on record. Communities like Oklahoma City are now preparing for a future with extreme temperatures by understanding which areas are the hottest.
Last year, Oklahoma City joined 14 other cities in a national project through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to map where heat lingers in neighborhoods. Oklahoma City's Office of Sustainability, in partnership with the University of Oklahoma, and other environmental organizations, recruited volunteers to act as "citizen scientists" to help researchers gather key data.
Those citizen scientists attached air quality and heat monitoring sensors to their cars to take air and temperature readings of the hottest neighborhoods in Oklahoma City on an August day last year.
Understanding where heat pockets persist in communities is the first step to cooling those places down — and protecting residents from heat illness. Hongwan Li, an assistant professor in the College of Public Health at the University of Oklahoma, researches air quality and helped collect data last summer.
"If we want to take a deeper look for the heat stress like in our communities, community-based is the most appropriate way to understand the heat stress better," Li said.
The data from the sensors last summer showed that downtown Oklahoma City was 15 degrees hotter than the outer edges of the city, like neighborhoods near Lake Stanley-Draper in the southeast.
Sarah Terry-Cobo, associate planner for Oklahoma City's Office of Sustainability, led last year's heat mapping efforts. She was surprised to find out that Mesta Park – with its large sycamore and oak trees that tower over houses – was one of the hottest areas in Oklahoma City.
"A more affluent area like Mesta Park has a lot of older tree canopy that's intact," Terry-Cobo said. "And that, you know, is still pretty hot compared to some of these other neighborhoods that we were expecting to be very hot."
Trees don't always provide enough cooling because heat gets trapped in roofs, roads, and sidewalks creating what's called the urban heat island effect.
Terry-Cobo walked around downtown Oklahoma City that rainy, humid August day capturing thermal images on her phone. The high for the day reached 98 degrees.
The prairie habitat at the Myriad Botanical Gardens in Oklahoma City, for example, had cooler temperatures than the concrete that makes up the core of the city. Thermal imaging put the sidewalk at 93 degrees while tree shade was at 85 degrees.
"What we're seeing right now in the Myriad Gardens is a great example of a potential cooling strategy for urban heat islands," she said.
Cooling strategies can come from understanding the hottest parts of urban areas. Since 2017, NOAA has funded the Climate Adaptation Planning and Analytics Heat Watch program (CAPA) to help organize and provide the equipment and results to over 60 communities across the U.S. and internationally.
Joey Williams, the project manager for CAPA Heat Watch, said heat mapping started to help people learn about where extreme heat impacts their lives, and to help cities come up with strategies to address it.
"As the threat of heat continues to rise, people become more aware that heat is an issue and life threatening and it affects different people differently," Williams said. "Having this kind of awareness that that's an issue can be a lifesaver."
Kansas City, Missouri used its heat mapping data from 2021 to understand where the city lacked tree canopy.
Andy Savastino, chief environmental officer with the city said that helped inform a new policy to preserve the city's tree canopy.
"Now, any time a developer wants to come into areas where there is an old growth forest, our tree preservation ordinance, which we never had one before, applies so that there is a requirement for developers to replace a percentage of the trees they take down," he said.
The city of Little Rock, Arkansas found during its heat mapping project last August that the hottest parts of the city didn't cool off at night.
Lennie Massanelli, the sustainability officer for the city, said that meant temperatures in the morning were hotter than the afternoon.
"At the very beginning of the day, the 6 to 7 a.m. map showed the hottest pockets of Little Rock, where heat just kind of stayed in one place," she said.
Oklahoma City's heat mapping campaign found the city needs more trees and fewer parking lots to help cool off neighborhoods during the hottest months.
Oklahoma City's sustainability office is developing a guide book this year to help city leaders determine the best ways to adapt to extreme heat. Terry-Cobo hopes that will include everything from changing zoning laws for parking to reclaiming native habitat wherever the city can — all in an effort to cool down some of the hottest parts of the city.
veryGood! (7156)
Related
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Nvidia 10-for-1 stock split goes into effect after stock price for the chipmaker doubled this year
- Hurry! J.Crew Factory Extended Their Extra 70% off Select Styles Sale – Deals Start at $6
- A dog helped his owner get rescued after a car crash in a remote, steep ravine in Oregon
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Sarah Paulson on why Tony nomination for her role in the play Appropriate feels meaningful
- A majority of Black Americans believe US institutions are conspiring against them, a Pew poll finds
- Fight over constitutional provisions to guard against oil, gas pollution moves ahead in New Mexico
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Hurry! J.Crew Factory Extended Their Extra 70% off Select Styles Sale – Deals Start at $6
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Teresa Giudice Breaks Silence on Real Housewives of New Jersey's Canceled Season 14 Reunion
- Texas girl played dead to survive shooting that killed her family
- Ex-police officer who once shared cell with Jeffrey Epstein gets life in prison for 4 murders
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- New York transit chief says agency must shrink subway improvements following nixed congestion toll
- Jennifer Aniston tears up discussing 'Friends' 30th anniversary: 'Don't make me cry'
- Part of Wyoming highway collapses in landslide, blocking crucial transit route
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
District attorney who prosecuted Barry Morphew faces disciplinary hearing
Jon Gosselin Shares Beach Day Body Transformation Amid Weight-Loss Journey
Measure aimed at repealing Alaska’s ranked choice voting system scores early, partial win in court
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Naomi Biden testifies in father Hunter Biden's gun trial | The Excerpt
Reverend James Lawson, civil rights activist and nonviolent protest pioneer dies at 95
The Daily Money: Are you guilty of financial infidelity?