ENERGY AND WATER SUSTAINABILITY: THE ROLE OF URBAN CLIMATE CHANGE FROM METROPOLITAN INFRASTRUCTURE

被引:14
|
作者
Golden, Jay S. [1 ]
Brazel, Anthony [2 ]
Salmond, Jennifer [3 ,4 ]
Laws, David [5 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, Global Inst Sustainabil, Natl Ctr Excellence SMART Innovat, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
[2] Arizona State Univ, Dept Geog, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
[3] Univ Birmingham, Div Environm Hlth & Risk Management Climate, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
[4] Univ Birmingham, Atmospher Programs, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
[5] MIT, Environm Technol & Policy Program, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF GREEN BUILDING | 2006年 / 1卷 / 03期
关键词
Urban Heat Island; electricity; water; metropolitan; infrastructure; urbanization; sustainability;
D O I
10.3992/jgb.1.3.124
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
As recently as 1950, 30% of the worlds population lived in urban areas. By the year 2030, 60% of the world population will live in cities. The science of sustainable development requires the ability to examine and understand the implications of broad and aggregate impacts. This is even more difficult in rapidly urbanizing regions globally where the pace of change itself becomes part of what has to be taken into account in engineering designs, modeling, planning, and policy development. Urbanization is quickly transitioning communities from native vegetation to man-made urban engineered infrastructure. Anthropogenic changes in the characteristics of the land surface can have a marked impact on the partitioning of energy at the surface. This is often manifested in microscale and mesoscale modifications to the thermal properties of the surface and atmosphere and can result in significant increases in temperatures in comparison to adjacent rural regions which, is known as the Urban Heat Island Effect (Urban Heat Island or UHI). The UHI is understood in theory, but its practical engineering and policy implications resist interpretation due to the variations in social economic and environmental conditions in a given region at a given time. The findings of this research indicate that the thermal modifications to the climate as result of urbanization have impacted the sustainability of the Phoenix, Arizona region. Overall HVAC electrical consumption for a representative 2, 000 ft(2) has increased from 7,888 kWh per year in the 1950's to over 8,873 kWh per year in the 1990's. This also impacts water supply in the and region as the research finds 6,550 gallons of water is consumed by household for HVAC electricity consumption.(5)
引用
下载
收藏
页码:124 / 138
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Electric industry infrastructure for sustainability: Climate change and energy storage
    Jewell, Ward T.
    2007 IEEE POWER ENGINEERING SOCIETY GENERAL MEETING, VOLS 1-10, 2007, : 1392 - 1394
  • [2] Electric Industry Infrastructure for Sustainability: Climate Change and Energy Storage
    Jewell, Ward T.
    2008 IEEE POWER & ENERGY SOCIETY GENERAL MEETING, VOLS 1-11, 2008, : 5064 - 5066
  • [3] Water requirement of Urban Green Infrastructure under climate change
    Cheng, Haojie
    Park, Chae Yeon
    Cho, Mingyun
    Park, Chan
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2023, 893
  • [4] Climate change, flooding and urban infrastructure
    Minnery, JR
    Smith, DI
    GREENHOUSE: COPING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE, 1996, : 235 - 247
  • [5] Institutional Reforms to Enhance Urban Water Infrastructure with Climate Change Uncertainty
    Ananda, Jayanath
    ECONOMIC PAPERS, 2014, 33 (02): : 123 - 136
  • [6] Sustainability Assessment of Urban Water Infrastructure Systems with Special Focus on the Urban Water-Energy Nexus
    Steiner, Franka
    Lehn, Helmut
    Weiss, Annika
    EXPANDING CITIES - DIMINISHING SPACE: ARE SMART CITIES THE SOLUTION OR PART OF THE PROBLEM OF CONTINUOUS URBANISATION AROUND THE GLOBE? (REAL CORP 2018), 2018, : 751 - 762
  • [7] Energy, Sustainability, and Climate Change
    Lee, Pooi See
    Lee, Seok Woo
    ADVANCED ENERGY AND SUSTAINABILITY RESEARCH, 2022, 3 (05):
  • [8] Climate Change and Urban Environment Sustainability
    Siregar, Dodi Fanhalen
    Tias, Tri Lestari Ning
    Ramlan, M.
    De Soysa, Jean Claudia
    URBAN STUDIES, 2024, 61 (11) : 2258 - 2261
  • [9] The role of climate change and decentralization in urban water services: A dynamic energy-water nexus analysis
    Khalkhali, Masoumeh
    Dilkina, Bistra
    Mo, Weiwei
    WATER RESEARCH, 2021, 207 (207)
  • [10] Review of quantitative methods for evaluating impacts of climate change on urban water infrastructure
    Grayman, W. M.
    Goodrich, J. A.
    McCoy-Simandle, C.
    INTEGRATING WATER SYSTEMS, 2010, : 783 - +