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The Heat Penalty: Evaluating the Compound Climate and Urban Heat Island Risks in Accelerated Megacity Development
Abstract
The rapid growth of megacities presents a critical challenge to climate resilience, as expanding urban footprints simultaneously intensify the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect and increase population exposure to climate change impacts. This study assesses the compounded climate vulnerability resulting from the synergistic interaction between UHI intensification and extreme weather events in rapidly growing global megacities. Utilizing integrated methodologies that combine remote sensing of Land Surface Temperature (LST), spatial climate projections, and comprehensive socio-economic vulnerability indices, we map and quantify the areas of highest risk. Our findings demonstrate that UHI effects significantly amplify the magnitude and duration of heat stress events, translating to a heightened risk of morbidity and mortality, particularly in informal settlements and high-density, low-canopy zones. Crucially, the analysis reveals a disproportionate concentration of climate vulnerability among marginalized populations, where pre-existing socio-economic stressors intersect with maximum heat exposure. The research provides actionable insights for climate-sensitive urban planning, emphasizing the urgent need for targeted, nature-based solutions and infrastructure investment to mitigate UHI effects and enhance the adaptive capacity of the most vulnerable urban communities.
Article information
Journal
British Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies
Volume (Issue)
2 (2)
Pages
01-10
Published
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Open access

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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