Chicago’s Heat Island and Climate Change: Bridging the Scales via Dynamical Downscaling

Author:

Conry Patrick1,Sharma Ashish2,Potosnak Mark J.3,Leo Laura S.1,Bensman Edward1,Hellmann Jessica J.4,Fernando Harindra J. S.1

Affiliation:

1. * Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana

2. + Environmental Change Initiative, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana

3. # Department of Environmental Science and Studies, DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois

4. @ Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana

Abstract

AbstractThe 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.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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