Back to news
1 Oct 2016 | Blog

Temperature as a comfort indicator for Delhi’s citizens

Suruchi Bhadwal & Prasoon Singh

0 mins Read

70% Complete
Automatic Weather Station Installed at TERI University

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…

Stay current

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.

Sign Up

Related Content

Continue exploring this topic

24 Jan 2018 Cryosphere
Fieldwork in the Himalaya

Getting there My heart still skips a beat whenever I recall my first field visit to Rikha Samba Glacier ...

2 May 2019 Blog
Promoting SPIPs with a gendered focus paying dividends

Solar-powered irrigation pumps (SPIPs) are visibly helping balance gender inequalities in agricultural participation and access to finance and land ownership ...

8 Mar 2018 Blog
Empathy, compassion, and action for change

A society's progress can be assessed by looking at how women and children are treated in that society. In terms ...

10 Jun 2017 Blog
Giving dugwells a new lease of life with solar powered pumps in the Soan Basin, Pakistan

Novel interventions for climate change adaptation are a step forward in meeting grass-root needs. Such has been the case with ...

8 Mar 2017 Blog
Water Scarcity and Women’s Lives: an Observation from the Field

Recently, while on a research trip studying adaptive water governance under the Himalayan Adaption, Water and Resilience ...

21 Mar 2019 Gender in Koshi
Transforming gender and social perceptions in the brick industry

With rapid urbanization and demand for construction materials in Nepal, brick kilns have proliferated across the country, providing livelihoods to ...

28 Jun 2016 Blog
Local farmer to entrepreneur—adapting to change

On the way to Syaphrubesi from Dhunche, we saw a small board advertising “Fresh Rainbow Trout”.  As is what happens ...

18 Mar 2019 Cryosphere
To share is to care, for the HKH and beyond

Scientists struggle with research challenges as they endeavour to improve our understanding of rapid changes in the environment and their ...