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Chicago’s Heat Island and Climate Change: Bridging the Scales via Dynamical Downscaling
86
Citations
82
References
2015
Year
Complex Surface HeterogeneityEngineeringUrban Energy ModelingUrban ModellingUrban Climate ImpactClimate ModelingAir TemperatureUrban WeatherEarth ScienceSocial SciencesRegional Climate ResponseMicrometeorologyUrban MeteorologyHydroclimate ModelingDynamical DownscalingHeat IslandClimate ChangeClimate SciencesMeteorologyGeographyForecasting ModelUrban EcologyUrban Heat MitigationClimate DynamicsClimatologyClimate Adaptation ScienceUrban Climate
Abstract The interaction of global climate change and urban heat islands (UHI) is expected to have far-reaching impacts on the sustainability of the world’s rapidly growing urban population centers. Given that a wide range of spatiotemporal scales contributed by meteorological forcing and complex surface heterogeneity complicates UHI, a multimodel nested approach is used in this paper to study climate-change impacts on the Chicago, Illinois, UHI, covering a range of relevant scales. One-way dynamical downscaling is used with a model chain consisting of global climate (Community Atmosphere Model), regional climate (Weather Research and Forecasting Model), and microscale (“ENVI-met”) models. Nested mesoscale and microscale models are evaluated against the present-day observations (including a dedicated urban miniature field study), and the results favorably demonstrate the fidelity of the downscaling techniques that were used. A simple building-energy model is developed and used in conjunction with microscale-model output to calculate future energy demands for a building, and a substantial increase (as much as 26% during daytime) is noted for future (~2080) climate. Although winds and lake-breeze circulation for future climate are favorable for reducing energy usage by 7%, the benefits are outweighed by such factors as exacerbated UHI and air temperature. An adverse change in human-comfort indicators is also noted in the future climate, with 92% of the population experiencing thermal discomfort. The model chain that was used has general applicability for evaluating climate-change impacts on city centers and, hence, for urban-sustainability studies.
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