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Section 1: Publication
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authorship
Rajulapati, C.R., Gaddam, R., Nerantzaki, S., Papalexiou, S.M., Cannon, A. and Clark, M.P.
Title
Exacerbated Heat in Large Canadian Cities
Year
2022
Publication Outlet
Urban Climate, 42, 101097
DOI
ISBN
ISSN
Citation
Rajulapati, C.R., Gaddam, R., Nerantzaki, S., Papalexiou, S.M., Cannon, A. and Clark, M.P., (2022) Exacerbated Heat in Large Canadian Cities, Urban Climate, 42, 101097,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.uclim.2022.101097.
Abstract
Extreme temperature is a major threat to urban populations; thus, it is crucial to understand future changes to plan adaptation and mitigation strategies. We assess historical and CMIP6 projected trends of minimum and maximum temperatures for the 18 most populated Canadian cities. Temperatures increase (on average 0.3°C/decade) in all cities during the historical period (1979–2014), with Prairie cities exhibiting lower rates (0.06°C/decade). Toronto (0.5°C/decade) and Montreal (0.7°C/decade) show high increasing trends in the observation period. Higher-elevation cities, among those with the same population, show slower increasing temperature rates compared to the coastal ones. Projections for cities in the Prairies show 12% more summer days compared to the other regions. The number of heat waves (HWs) increases for all cities, in both the historical and future periods; yet alarming increases are projected for Vancouver, Victoria, and Halifax from no HWs in the historical period to approximately 4 HWs/year on average, towards the end of 2100 for the SSP5–8.5. The cold waves reduce considerably for all cities in the historical period at a rate of 2 CWs/decade on average and are projected to further reduce by 50% compared to the observed period.
Plain Language Summary
Section 2: Additional Information
Program Affiliations
Project Affiliations
Submitters
Publication Stage
Published
Theme
Presentation Format
Additional Information
Modelling-Core, Refereed Publications