Investigating the Relationship between Human Activity and the Urban Heat Island Effect in Melbourne and Four Other International Cities Impacted by COVID-19
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Urban Heat Island (UHI) Effect
2.1. Causes of Urban Heat Island Effect
2.2. The Importance of Evaluating the Urban Heat Island Effect
3. Materials and Methodology
3.1. Study Area
- Availability of sufficient historical data for estimating the UHI effect;
- Large population size and urban area to observe a significant change in human activities;
- The level of restriction on human activities due to COVID-19;
- The duration of lockdown that the city has experienced;
- Location in a coast area;
- Köppen climate classification of group C and D without dry season (letter code f).
3.2. Estimate the UHI Intensity
3.3. Data Collection
4. Analysis of Results
4.1. Melbourne
4.2. New York City
4.3. Tokyo
4.4. Dublin
4.5. Oslo
5. Discussion
- (1)
- High-density cities showed a low UHI effect trend after lockdown restrictions were introduced;
- (2)
- The differences in UHI intensity are more distinctive in cities with stricter rules and longer lockdown duration;
- (3)
- The overall UHI intensity in 2020 was the lowest recorded in the past five years.
6. Recommendations
6.1. Energy Consumption
6.2. Transportation
- Limit car parking space for non-essential vehicles in the inner city to reduce traffic volume into the city and the risks of community spread of the virus in the future;
- Encourage people to use digital tools or apps to monitor and analyse their modes of transportation, thereby allowing them to conduct contact tracing of the coronavirus as well as check their carbon footprint;
- Improve bike lanes and road infrastructures to provide safer and user-friendly road conditions for people to commute by bike.
6.3. Building Materials
- Reduce building materials with good solar heat absorption, such as concrete, glass, stainless steel, and ceramic gravel;
- Avoid using dark colors on buildings and road surfaces to reduce radiation absorption;
- Increase the green areas and green infrastructures in the urban area to improve the cooling effect [95].
6.4. Future Research
7. Summary and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
ID | Name/Location | Latitude | Longitude | Elevation | Population Density | Distance Range |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decimal | Decimal | (m) | (People/km2) | (km) | ||
U1 | Melbourne (Olympic Park) | −37.83 | 144.98 | 7.53 | 5000–10,000 | 0–25 |
U2 | Viewbank | −37.74 | 145.10 | 66.1 | 1000–2500 | 0–25 |
U3 | Essendon Airport | −37.73 | 144.91 | 78.4 | 2500–5000 | 0–25 |
U4 | Melbourne Airport | −37.67 | 144.83 | 113.4 | 250–500 | 0–25 |
U5 | Moorabbin Airport | −37.98 | 145.10 | 12.1 | 1000–2500 | 0–25 |
U6 | Scoresby Research Institute | −37.87 | 145.26 | 80 | 1000–2500 | 0–25 |
U7 | Laverton RAAF | −37.86 | 144.76 | 20.1 | 1000–2500 | 0–25 |
R1 | Sheoaks | −37.91 | 144.13 | 236.7 | 5–10 | 75–100 |
R2 | Aireys Inlet | −38.46 | 144.09 | 105 | 10–25 | >100 |
R3 | Mount Gellibrand | −38.23 | 143.79 | 261 | 5–10 | >100 |
R4 | Castlemaine Prison | −37.08 | 144.24 | 330 | 10–25 | >100 |
R5 | Redesdale | −37.02 | 144.52 | 290 | 25–50 | 75–100 |
R6 | Lake Eildon | −37.23 | 145.91 | 230 | 1–5 | >100 |
R7 | Eildon Fire Tower | −37.21 | 145.84 | 637 | 1–5 | >100 |
R8 | Nilma North (Warragul) | −38.13 | 145.99 | 134.11 | 10–25 | 75–100 |
R9 | Rhyll | −38.46 | 145.31 | 13.4 | 25–50 | 75–100 |
R10 | Wonthaggi | −38.61 | 145.60 | 51.9 | 25–50 | >100 |
ID | Name/Location | Latitude | Longitude | Elevation | Population Density | Distance Range |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decimal | Decimal | (m) | (People/km2) | (km) | ||
U1 | Central Park | 40.78 | −73.97 | 47 | 25,000–50,000 | 0–25 |
U2 | La Guardia Airport | 40.78 | −73.88 | 6 | 5000–10,000 | 0–25 |
U3 | Teterboro Airport | 40.86 | −74.06 | 2 | 1000–2500 | 0–25 |
U4 | Harrison | 40.75 | −74.15 | 7 | 5000–10,000 | 0–25 |
U5 | Newark International Airport | 40.68 | −74.17 | 5 | 1000–2500 | 0–25 |
U6 | JFK International Airport | 40.64 | −73.76 | 3 | 5000–10,000 | 0–25 |
R1 | Shrub Oak | 41.33 | −73.84 | 128 | 100–250 | 50–75 |
R2 | Port Jervis | 41.39 | −74.69 | 177 | 100–250 | 75–100 |
R3 | Freehold−Marlboro | 40.31 | −74.25 | 50 | 500–1000 | 50−75 |
R4 | Wertsville 4 NE | 40.45 | −74.78 | 87 | 100–250 | 75–100 |
R5 | Flemington 5 NNW | 40.58 | −74.88 | 75 | 100–250 | 75–100 |
R6 | Hightstown 2 W | 40.27 | −74.57 | 30 | 500–1000 | 75−100 |
R7 | Belvidere Bridge | 40.83 | −75.08 | 78 | 100–250 | 75−100 |
R8 | Baiting Hollow | 40.97 | −72.71 | 24 | 500–1000 | >100 |
ID | Name/Location | Latitude | Longitude | Elevation | Population Density | Distance Range |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decimal | Decimal | (m) | (People/km2) | (km) | ||
U1 | Tokyo (Chiyoda) | 35.68 | 139.75 | 25.2 | 10,000–25,000 | 0–25 |
U2 | Edogawa Rinkai | 35.63 | 139.85 | 5 | 10,000–25,000 | 0–25 |
U3 | Nerima | 35.73 | 139.58 | 51 | 10,000–25,000 | 0–25 |
U4 | Fuchu | 35.68 | 139.48 | 59 | 5000–10,000 | 0–25 |
U5 | Haneda (Airport) | 35.55 | 139.76 | 6 | 10,000–25,000 | 0–25 |
U6 | Saitatma | 35.86 | 139.58 | 8 | 5000–10,000 | 0–25 |
U7 | Koshigawa | 35.88 | 139.75 | 3 | 5000–10,000 | 0–25 |
R1 | Chichibu | 35.98 | 139.06 | 232.1 | 100–250 | 50–75 |
R2 | Yokoshibahikari | 35.65 | 140.46 | 6 | 250–500 | 50–75 |
R3 | Sakahata | 35.23 | 140.08 | 120 | 250–500 | 50–75 |
R4 | Kamogawa | 35.10 | 140.10 | 5 | 100–250 | 50–75 |
R5 | Tateyama | 34.98 | 139.85 | 5.8 | 250–500 | 75–100 |
R6 | Katori | 35.85 | 140.50 | 37 | 250–500 | 50–75 |
R7 | Katsuura | 35.15 | 140.30 | 11.9 | 100–250 | 75–100 |
R8 | Ogouchi | 35.78 | 139.05 | 530 | 100–250 | 50–75 |
ID | Name/Location | Latitude | Longitude | Elevation | Population Density | Distance Range |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decimal | Decimal | (m) | (People/km2) | (km) | ||
U1 | Phoenix Park | 53.36 | −6.32 | 45 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U2 | Casement Aerodrome | 53.31 | −6.44 | 91 | 1000–2500 | 0–15 |
U3 | Glasnevin | 53.37 | −6.27 | 20 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U4 | Merrion Square | 53.34 | −6.25 | 19 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U5 | Dublin Airport | 53.43 | −6.24 | 69 | 500–1000 | 0–15 |
U6 | Dun Laoghaire | 53.29 | −6.13 | 30 | 1000–2500 | 0–15 |
R1 | Kilmichael, Cahore | 52.56 | −6.21 | 30 | 100–250 | 70–110 |
R2 | Dunoge, Carrickmacross | 53.98 | −6.75 | 78 | 100–250 | 70–110 |
R3 | Irishstown, Mullingar | 53.54 | −7.36 | 98 | 500–1000 | 70–110 |
R4 | Gurteen, Tipperary | 53.04 | −8.01 | 75 | 500–1000 | 70–110 |
R5 | Greenshill, Kilkenny | 52.67 | −7.25 | 61 | 500–1000 | 70–110 |
ID | Name/Location | Latitude | Longitude | Elevation | Population Density | Distance Range |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decimal | Decimal | (m) | (People/km2) | (km) | ||
U1 | Besserud | 59.96 | 10.67 | 177 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U2 | Haugenstua | 59.96 | 10.91 | 123 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U3 | Lambertseter | 59.87 | 10.81 | 135 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U4 | Sofienberg | 59.92 | 10.77 | 37 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U5 | Blindern | 59.94 | 10.72 | 94 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
U6 | Disen | 59.94 | 10.79 | 136 | 2500–5000 | 0–15 |
R1 | Nøtterøy-Vestskogen | 59.24 | 10.40 | 25 | 250–500 | 70–90 |
R2 | Flesberg | 59.86 | 9.45 | 183 | 25–50 | 70–90 |
R3 | Nord-odal | 60.26 | 12.05 | 147 | 25–50 | 70–90 |
R4 | Nesbyen-Todokk | 60.38 | 9.61 | 166 | 10–25 | 70–90 |
R5 | Sigdal-Nedre Eggedal | 60.14 | 9.44 | 143 | 25–50 | 70–90 |
Appendix B
Start | End | Public Gathering | Restaurant, Bar & Café | Shops & Retails | Curfew | Travel Distance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
26 March | 30 March | Maximum 10 people | Open | Yes | No | No restriction |
31 March | 11 May | Maximum 2 people | Takeaway only | Essential only | No | No restriction |
12 May | 31 May | Maximum 10 people | Takeaway only | Essential only | No | No restriction |
1 June | 19 June | Maximum 20 people | Open with restrictions | Essential only | No | No restriction |
20 June | 8 July | Maximum 10 people | Open with restrictions | Essential only | No | No restriction |
8 July | 1 August | Maximum 2 people | Takeaway only | Essential only | No | Within reasonable distance |
2 August | 13 September | Maximum 2 people | Takeaway only | once per day per household | 8 p.m.–5 a.m. | <5 km of home |
14 September | 29 September | Maximum 2 people | Takeaway only | once per day per household | 9 p.m.–5 a.m. | <5 km of home |
29 September | 26 October | maximum 5 people from 2 households | Takeaway only | once per day per household | 9 p.m.–5 a.m. | <5 km of home |
27 October | 23 November | Maximum 10 people | Predominantly outdoor with 10-person group limit | Open with restrictions | No | <25 km of home |
Key Dates | Key Announcement |
---|---|
1 March 20 | First COVID-19 case in New York State |
7 March 20 | NY Governor Andrew Cuomo declares a state of emergency |
12 March 20 | NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio declares a state of emergency |
13 March 20 | President Trump declares a national emergency |
16 March 20 | NYC public schools close |
17 March 20 | NYC bars and restaurants close, except for delivery |
22 March 20 | NYS on PAUSE Program begins, all non-essential workers must stay home |
28 March 20 | Halts all non-essential construction sites in NYS |
6 April 20 | NYS’s stay-at-home order and school closures extends to 29 April |
16 April 20 | NYS’s stay-at-home order and school closures extends to 15 May |
30 April 20 | NYC subway closures from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. |
1 May 20 | Closes all schools for the remainder of the academic year |
7 May 20 | Extends PAUSE order to 6 June |
14 May 20 | Extends PAUSE order to May 28 for NYC |
14 May 20 | State of emergency for NYS extended to 13 June |
15 May 20 | Reopen of Drive-in theaters, landscaping, and low-risk recreational activities |
23 May 20 | Allows gatherings of up to 10 people with social distancing |
8 June 20 | NYC begins Phase 1 reopening |
22 June 20 | NYC begins phase 2 of reopening |
6 July 20 | NYC begins Phase 3 of reopening, without indoor dining |
19 July 20 | NYC begins Phase 4 reopening, excluding malls, museums, and indoor dining/bars |
2 September 20 | Gyms in NYC reopen, but indoor group workouts and pools stay closed |
9 September 20 | Malls in NYC reopen at 50% capacity with no indoor dining. Casinos reopen across NYS at 25% capacity. |
29 September 20 | Elementary students return to public school classrooms across NYC |
30 September 20 | Indoor dining in NYC resumes with a 25% occupancy limit |
Key Dates | Key Announcement |
---|---|
16 January 20 | First confirmed case in Japan |
26 January 20 | Japan started evacuating its citizens from Wuhan, China |
10 February 20 | Virus spreading from Diamond Princess Cruise ship arrived in Yokohama Bay |
14 February 20 | Kyoto launched its empty tourism campaign |
27 February 20 | Prime Minister Abe Shinzo requested closure of all elementary, junior high, and high schools |
28 February 20 | Hokkaido prefecture was the first one to declare a state of Emergency |
25 March 20 | Tokyo governor Koike-san asked people to stay indoors over the weekend to stop community spread |
1 April 20 | Foreigners that have travelled to 73 different countries in the last 14 days will be denied entry to the country. |
7 April 20 | Prime Minster Abe Shinzo declare a state of emergency that cover Tokyo and six other prefectures. |
10 April 20 | Tokyo government offered financially compensated to businesses that agreed to reduce operating hours |
16 April 20 | Japan declared a national wide state of emergency |
14 May 20 | The state of emergency lifts from 39 prefectures, but not include Tokyo |
25 May 20 | Tokyo has lifted the state of emergency, international travel allowed from permitted countries |
27 May 20 | Tokyo ease up restrictions in three stages |
1 June 20 | Children allowed back to school |
Key Dates | Key Announcement |
---|---|
29 February 20 | First confirmed case in the Republic of Ireland. Ireland entered the containment phase |
12 March 20 | Announced the closure of all schools, colleges, and childcare facilities until 29 March |
27 March 20 | Announced a national stay-at-home order unit 12 April |
10 April 20 | Extended the stay-at-home order unit 5 May |
1 May 20 | Extended the stay-at-home order unit 18 May |
18 May 20 | Phase one of the government’s roadmap of easing COVID-19 restrictions began |
8 June 20 | Phase two plus of the government’s roadmap of easing COVID-19 restrictions began |
29 June 20 | Phase three began, businesses reopened, including all pubs serving food, cafés, restaurants, hotels, hairdressers, beauty salons and tourist attractions |
15 July 20 | Phase four is postponed to 10 August; Pubs, hotel bars, nightclubs and casinos will remain closed; Restrictions on public gathering remained |
4 August 20 | Phase four will not proceed on 10 August; Restaurants and pubs serving food will now have to close by 11 pm except deliveries and takeaways |
7 August 20 | Confirmed cases increased, restrictions were applied to some counties |
15 August 20 | Announced of second spread of disease |
Key Dates | Key Announcement |
---|---|
26 February 20 | First confirmed case |
12 March 20 | A national lockdown for 14 days |
16 March 20 | Introduced an internal border control |
28 March 20 | The government extended the lockdown until 13 April. |
14 April 20 | Internal border control has been extended for 20 days from 15 April |
20 April 20 | Kindergartens and schools are gradually reopening |
30 April 20 | Internal border control will be continued unit 16 May |
7 May 20 | Venues reopened in public places for maximum 50 people; a few community areas are reopening |
5 June 20 | People allowed back to office and workplace |
15 June 20 | Gym, water parks, and swimming pools are reopened; venues allowed maximum 200 people |
25 June 20 | Foreigner works and students allow to entry |
15 July 20 | Allow travel between Norway and other European countries |
7 August 20 | Government slow down the reopening and tightening control of the spread of infection |
12 August 20 | Continued internal border control from 14 August for 60 days. |
30 September 20 | More national infection control measurements are being replaced by local measurements. |
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City | Geographical Location (Latitude, Longitude) | Population (Thousands) | Land Area (km2) | Köppen Climate Classification |
---|---|---|---|---|
Melbourne | Costal Area | 4963 | 9993 | oceanic climate (Cfb) |
(37.81° S, 144.96° E) | ||||
Tokyo | Costal Area | 35,600 | 13,555 | humid subtropical climate (Cfa) |
(35.68° N, 139.75° E) | ||||
New York City | Costal area | 8337 | 783.8 | humid subtropical climate (Cfa); humid continental climate (Dfa) |
(40.78° N, −73.97° E) | ||||
Dublin | Costal Area | 1111 | 317.5 | marine west coast climate (Cfb) |
(53.35° N, −6.27° E) | ||||
Oslo | Costal Area | 693 | 426.4 | humid continental climate (Dfa) |
(59.91° N, 10.75° E) |
Year | Annual Average UHI Intensity (°C) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Melbourne | Tokyo | New York City | Dublin | Oslo | Overall | |
2016 | 0.99 | 0.53 | 0.68 | 0.25 | 0.69 | 0.63 |
2017 | 1.11 | 0.67 | 0.80 | 0.15 | 0.59 | 0.66 |
2018 | 0.88 | 0.65 | 0.90 | 0.05 | 0.74 | 0.64 |
2019 | 1.03 | 0.61 | 0.52 | 0.09 | 0.59 | 0.57 |
2020 | 0.89 | 0.56 | 0.41 | 0.22 | 0.61 | 0.54 |
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Wai, C.Y.; Muttil, N.; Tariq, M.A.U.R.; Paresi, P.; Nnachi, R.C.; Ng, A.W.M. Investigating the Relationship between Human Activity and the Urban Heat Island Effect in Melbourne and Four Other International Cities Impacted by COVID-19. Sustainability 2022, 14, 378. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14010378
Wai CY, Muttil N, Tariq MAUR, Paresi P, Nnachi RC, Ng AWM. Investigating the Relationship between Human Activity and the Urban Heat Island Effect in Melbourne and Four Other International Cities Impacted by COVID-19. Sustainability. 2022; 14(1):378. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14010378
Chicago/Turabian StyleWai, Cheuk Yin, Nitin Muttil, Muhammad Atiq Ur Rehman Tariq, Prudvireddy Paresi, Raphael Chukwuka Nnachi, and Anne W. M. Ng. 2022. "Investigating the Relationship between Human Activity and the Urban Heat Island Effect in Melbourne and Four Other International Cities Impacted by COVID-19" Sustainability 14, no. 1: 378. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14010378
APA StyleWai, C. Y., Muttil, N., Tariq, M. A. U. R., Paresi, P., Nnachi, R. C., & Ng, A. W. M. (2022). Investigating the Relationship between Human Activity and the Urban Heat Island Effect in Melbourne and Four Other International Cities Impacted by COVID-19. Sustainability, 14(1), 378. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14010378