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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Increasing green infrastructure in cities: Impact on ambient temperature, air quality and heat-related mortality and morbidity

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Santamouris M, Osmond P
2020
Buildings. 10 (12)

Urban vegetation provides undeniable benefits to urban climate, health, thermal comfort and environmental quality of cities and represents one of the most considered urban heat mitigation measures. Despite the plethora of available scientific information, very little is known about the holistic and global impact of a potential increase of urban green infrastructure (GI) on urban climate, environmental quality and health, and their synergies and trade-offs. There is a need to evaluate globally the extent to which additional GI provides benefits and quantify the problems arising from the deployment of additional greenery in cities which are usually overlooked or neglected. The present paper has reviewed and analysed 55 fully evaluated scenarios and case studies investigating the impact of additional GI on urban temperature, air pollution and health for 39 cities. Statistically significant correlations between the percentage increase of the urban GI and the peak daily and night ambient temperatures are obtained. The average maximum peak daily and night-time temperature drop may not exceed 1.8 and 2.3 degrees C respectively, even for a maximum GI fraction. In parallel, a statistically significant correlation between the peak daily temperature decrease caused by higher GI fractions and heat-related mortality is found. When the peak daily temperature drops by 0.1 degrees C, then the percentage of heat-related mortality decreases on average by 3.0% The impact of additional urban GI on the concentration of urban pollutants is analysed, and the main parameters contributing to decrease or increase of the pollutants' concentration are presented.

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Resource Description

    Air Pollution, Temperature
    • Air Pollution, Temperature: Ground-Level Ozone, Particulate Matter
    • Air Pollution, Temperature: Extreme Heat/Heat Wave
    Urban
    Global or Unspecified Location
    Morbidity/Mortality, Temperature-Related Health Impact
    • Morbidity/Mortality, Temperature-Related Health Impact: Heat-Related Health Impact
    Review Article
    Adaptation, Research Gap
    • Adaptation, Research Gap: Adaptation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm, Intervention
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