This site uses cookies, as explained in our terms of use. If you consent, please close this message and continue to use this site.
Suruchi Bhadwal & Prasoon Singh
0 mins Read
The phenomenon of temperature rise in urban centers, has gained attention in the recent decades. Known as the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect, it was first conceptualized by Luke Howard in the early 1800s. Since then, several attempts have been made to study this effect vis-à-vis respective peri-urban surroundings in metropolitan landscapes. These studies have shown that the urban areas undergoing change in land cover, i.e adopting more asphaltic and concrete surfaces, have a larger role in temperature change. This, coupled with air pollution, unsustainable resource use, and haphazard urban development contribute to a changing thermal profile. The cumulative effect of all these anthropogenic activities traps the radiative heat in the atmosphere causing this rise in temperature.
READ MORE…
Share
Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.
Related Content
The perpetuation of gender roles is a repetitive, systematic, and recurring behaviour. It perpetuates within the social structure by defining ...
Women are increasingly getting an education in underdeveloped/developing countries, despite this by no means being the norm (for example, according ...
Having never been to the far-western region of Nepal, my perception of Darchula was based solely on stories I had ...
The Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KSLCDI), with support from the District Agriculture Development Office, organized a local ...
Dug wells have been the only source of water for many areas in the Potohar region for ages. Agriculture is ...
In Nepali, the word dobato means a point where two roads diverge. The village of Dobato in Ilam District, eastern ...
I was just in time to catch my bus to work. Hurriedly, I stepped onto the bus and found a ...
Solar-powered irrigation pumps (SPIPs) are visibly helping balance gender inequalities in agricultural participation and access to finance and land ownership ...