Atmosphere (Feb 2023)
Impact of Building Energy Mitigation Measures on Future Climate
Abstract
As cities are increasing technological efficacy on greenhouse gas (GH) emission reduction efforts, the surrounding urban ecosystems and natural resources may be affected by these measures. In this research, climate indicators such as heat index, extreme heat events, intensified urban heat islands (UHIs), and sea breeze are projected for the middle and end of the 21st century to understand the climate change signal on these variables with and without building energy mitigation measures. Cities amplify extreme heat and UHI impacts by concentrating large populations and critical infrastructure in relatively small areas. Here, we evaluate the combined climate and building energy mitigation impacts on localized climate metrics throughout the 21st century across extreme emission scenarios (RCP8.5) for the tropical coastal city of San Juan. The analysis of statistically downscaled global circulation model outputs shows underestimation for uncorrected summer daily maximum temperatures, leading to lower extreme heat intensity and duration projections from the present time which are corrected using bias-corrected techniques. High-resolution dynamic downscaling simulations reveal a strong dependency of changes in extreme heat events in urban settings, however, the intensities shift to lower-level grasslands and croplands with energy mitigation measures (combination of white roof, tilted photovoltaic roof, and efficient heating ventilation and air conditioning systems). The building energy mitigation measures have the potential of reducing the UHI intensities to 1 °C and 0.5 °C for the 2050 and 2100 climate periods, respectively.
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