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More extremely hot days, more heat exposure and fewer cooling options for people of color in Connecticut, U.S.

Environmental Studies and Forestry

More extremely hot days, more heat exposure and fewer cooling options for people of color in Connecticut, U.S.

S. Chen, K. Lund, et al.

This research by Shijuan Chen, Katie Lund, Colleen Murphy-Dunning, and Karen C. Seto sheds light on the alarming disparities in urban heat exposure faced by people of color compared to white residents in Connecticut, revealing significant temperature differences and lower adaptive capacities in POC communities.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
This study investigates the disparities in urban heat exposure and cooling strategies between people of color (POC) and white residents across ten cities in Connecticut. The results demonstrate that POC communities experience significantly higher temperatures, more extremely hot days, and greater increases in heat exposure over time. Furthermore, POC communities exhibit lower air conditioning ownership rates and less tree cover, indicating reduced adaptive capacity to heat. These findings highlight the disproportionate vulnerability of POC to rising urban heat.
Publisher
npj Urban Sustainability
Published On
Nov 03, 2024
Authors
Shijuan Chen, Katie Lund, Colleen Murphy-Dunning, Karen C. Seto
Tags
urban heat exposure
people of color
cooling strategies
Connecticut
adaptive capacity
environmental disparities
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