Urbanisation's contribution to climate warming in Great Britain

被引:18
作者
Bassett, R. [1 ]
Young, P. J. [1 ,2 ]
Blair, G. S. [2 ,3 ]
Cai, X-M [4 ]
Chapman, L. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lancaster, Lancaster Environm Ctr, Lancaster, England
[2] Univ Lancaster, Ctr Excellence Environm Data Sci, Lancaster, England
[3] Univ Lancaster, Sch Comp & Commun, Lancaster, England
[4] Univ Birmingham, Sch Geog Earth & Environm Sci, Birmingham, W Midlands, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
Climate; heatwave; land-use change; urban heat island; urbanisation; URBAN HEAT-ISLAND; TEMPERATURE TRENDS; UNITED-STATES; URBANIZATION; EXPANSION; IMPACTS; ADVECTION; WATER;
D O I
10.1088/1748-9326/abbb51
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Urbanisation is changing the climate of the world we live in. In Great Britain (GB) 5.8% of the total land area is covered by artificial surfaces, increasing from 4.3% in 1975. Aside from associated loss of farmland, biodiversity and a range of ecosystem services, changing to urban form warms the Earth's surface: the urban heat island (UHI) effect. Standard estimates of temperature changes do not account for urbanisation (i.e. use of rural-only stations or removal of urban bias in observations), meaning that anthropogenic modifications to the land surface may be causing the surface-level atmosphere to warm quicker than those estimates suggest. Using observations from a high-density urban monitoring network, we show that locally this warming (instantaneously) may be over 8 degrees C. Based on the relationships between UHI intensity, urban fraction and wind speed in this network, we create a statistical model and use it to estimate the current daily-mean urban warming across GB to be 0.04 degrees C [0.02 degrees C -0.06 degrees C]. Despite this climate contribution appearing small (94% of GB's land cover for the time-being is still rural), we show that half of GB's population currently live in areas with average daily-mean warming similar to 0.4 degrees C. Under heatwave conditions our high estimates show 40% of GB's population may experience over a 1 degrees C daily-mean UHI. Furthermore, simply due to urbanisation (1975-2014) we estimate GB is warming at a rate equivalent and in addition to 3.4% [1.9%-5.0%] of the observed surface-level warming calculated from background stations. In the fastest urbanising region, South East GB, we find that these warming rates are up to three times faster. The methodology is straightforward and can be readily extended to other countries or updated as future land cover data becomes available.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 52 条
  • [1] Allometric scaling of thermal infrared emitted from UK cities and its relation to urban form
    Abdulrasheed, M.
    MacKenzie, A. R.
    Whyatt, J. D.
    Chapman, L.
    [J]. CITY AND ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS, 2020, 5
  • [2] The dimensions of global urban expansion: Estimates and projections for all countries, 2000-2050
    Angel, Shlomo
    Parent, Jason
    Civco, Daniel L.
    Blei, Alexander
    Potere, David
    [J]. PROGRESS IN PLANNING, 2011, 75 : 53 - 107
  • [3] Two decades of urban climate research: A review of turbulence, exchanges of energy and water, and the urban heat island
    Arnfield, AJ
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2003, 23 (01) : 1 - 26
  • [4] Higher CO2 concentrations increase extreme event risk in a 1.5 °C world
    Baker, Hugh S.
    Millar, Richard J.
    Karoly, David J.
    Beyerle, Urs
    Guillod, Benoit P.
    Mitchell, Dann
    Shiogama, Hideo
    Sparrow, Sarah
    Woollings, Tim
    Allen, Myles R.
    [J]. NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2018, 8 (07) : 604 - +
  • [5] Progress in observing and modelling the urban boundary layer
    Barlow, Janet F.
    [J]. URBAN CLIMATE, 2014, 10 : 216 - 240
  • [6] The Effects of Heat Advection on UK Weather and Climate Observations in the Vicinity of Small Urbanized Areas
    Bassett, Richard
    Cai, Xiaoming
    Chapman, Lee
    Heaviside, Clare
    Thornes, John E.
    [J]. BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 2017, 165 (01) : 181 - 196
  • [7] Observations of urban heat island advection from a high-density monitoring network
    Bassett, Richard
    Cai, Xiaoming
    Chapman, Lee
    Heaviside, Clare
    Thornes, John E.
    Muller, Catherine L.
    Young, Duick T.
    Warren, Elliott L.
    [J]. QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 142 (699) : 2434 - 2441
  • [8] Predicting the likely impact of urbanisation on bat populations using citizen science data, a case study for Norfolk, UK
    Border, Jennifer A.
    Newson, Stuart E.
    White, David C. J.
    Gillings, Simon
    [J]. LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING, 2017, 162 : 44 - 55
  • [9] Burt S., 2004, Weather, V59, P199, DOI DOI 10.1256/wea.10.04A
  • [10] Global projections of future urban land expansion under shared socioeconomic pathways
    Chen, Guangzhao
    Li, Xia
    Liu, Xiaoping
    Chen, Yimin
    Liang, Xun
    Leng, Jiye
    Xu, Xiaocong
    Liao, Weilin
    Qiu, Yue'an
    Wu, Qianlian
    Huang, Kangning
    [J]. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2020, 11 (01)