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Disproportionate exposure to urban heat island intensity across major US cities

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Disproportionate exposure to urban heat island intensity across major US cities

A. Hsu, G. Sheriff, et al.

Discover how urban heat stress impacts marginalized communities in the United States, revealing that people of color and low-income groups are disproportionately affected by higher urban heat island intensities. This crucial research was conducted by Angel Hsu, Glenn Sheriff, Tirthankar Chakraborty, and Diego Manya.... show more
Abstract
Urban heat stress poses a major risk to public health. Case studies of individual cities suggest that heat exposure, like other environmental stressors, may be unequally distributed across income groups. There is little evidence, however, as to whether such disparities are pervasive. We combine surface urban heat island (SUHI) data, a proxy for isolating the urban contribution to additional heat exposure in built environments, with census tract-level demographic data to answer these questions for summer days, when heat exposure is likely to be at a maximum. We find that the average person of color lives in a census tract with higher SUHI intensity than non-Hispanic whites in all but 6 of the 175 largest urbanized areas in the continental United States. A similar pattern emerges for people living in households below the poverty line relative to those at more than two times the poverty line.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
May 25, 2021
Authors
Angel Hsu, Glenn Sheriff, Tirthankar Chakraborty, Diego Manya
Tags
urban heat stress
public health
heat exposure disparities
income groups
racial/ethnic groups
urbanization
socioeconomic inequalities
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