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Températures extrêmes : comment les villes nord-américaines amplifient-elles le changement climatique?

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Après avoir battu des records de chaleur durant l’été, 2023 est en voie de devenir l’année la plus chaude de tous les temps.


Ce balado est en anglais seulement.

Le balado Sustainability Leaders est accessible en direct sur tous les principaux réseaux, y compris AppleGoogle et Spotify.


Un monde plus chaud remodèlera les économies et les secteurs économiques

Les villes, qui comptent 4,4 milliards de personnes et représentent 80 % du PIB mondial, sont de plus en plus confrontées à des défis liés aux changements climatiques, comme la chaleur extrême.

En Amérique du Nord, des millions de personnes vivent dans des villes où la chaleur extrême est déjà présente. Et les populations urbaines augmentent. Aux États-Unis et au Canada, près de 90 % des habitants vivront dans des villes d’ici 2050.

Les villes sont des îlots de chaleur. Elles sont plus chaudes que les zones environnantes en raison des surfaces sombres qui absorbent la chaleur (bâtiments, routes, stationnements) et d’une réduction proportionnelle des zones naturelles. Par conséquent, les effets de la chaleur extrême se concentrent là où l’activité économique est la plus forte et où les coûts sociaux sont les plus élevés.

Attention aux écarts de température extrêmes

Une récente analyse de l’Institut pour le climat et de Climate Engine de BMO examine ce phénomène dans les grandes villes américaines et canadiennes.

Les villes canadiennes présentent certains des écarts les plus importants entre les températures extrêmes dans les centres urbains et dans les campagnes environnantes.

A graphic comparing recent high land surface temperatures inside of and outside of six major cities in North America.

Des chaînes d’approvisionnement aux prix à la pompe

Les températures extrêmes auront un effet prononcé sur les secteurs essentiels à la transition vers une économie à faibles émissions de carbone, tels que la production d’électricité, l’agriculture, la construction et l’utilisation de l’énergie dans les bâtiments, ainsi que des répercussions potentielles sur les consommateurs.

Nous avons déjà eu un aperçu de l’impact économique. Les pertes cumulatives attribuées aux événements induits par la chaleur sont estimées entre 5 et 29 billions de dollars américains à l’échelle mondiale entre 1992 et 2013.

Les perturbations de la chaîne d’approvisionnement, les pannes d’électricité, les retards dans les transports en commun et les défaillances des infrastructures sont tous plus probables dans des conditions de chaleur extrême.

La productivité peut également diminuer avec chaque degré d’augmentation de la chaleur. À l’horizon 2030, l’Organisation internationale du travail estime qu’environ 2 % du nombre total d’heures de travail dans le monde pourrait être perdu chaque année en raison de la chaleur extrême, ce qui entraînerait une baisse de la production économique de 2,4 billions de dollars américains.

Les températures élevées peuvent également frapper plus près de chez soi. Par exemple, on estime que le coût de l’énergie domestique aux États-Unis a augmenté de 12 % pendant l’été en raison des températures extrêmes. Les interruptions de service dans les raffineries liées à la chaleur ont également contribué à l’augmentation des prix de l’essence aux États-Unis cet été.

Le comté de Miami-Dade est l’un des premiers endroits du monde à nommer un responsable chargé d’améliorer la résilience des communautés à la chaleur extrême. Jane Gilbert, responsable des questions liées à la chaleur pour le comté de Miami-Dade, encourage les investissements dans la modernisation des habitations au moyen de systèmes de refroidissement à haut rendement énergétique et l’augmentation des efforts de plantation et de préservation des arbres. « La plantation d’arbres et l’amélioration de l’efficacité énergétique nous aident tous à passer à une économie plus propre et à lutter contre les îlots de chaleur urbains », a-t-elle déclaré dans un épisode de notre balado « Sustainability Leaders ».

Projections de chaleur extrême en Amérique du Nord

Les températures extrêmes – celles qui dépassent 32℃ – devraient être plus fréquentes, selon plusieurs scénarios de réchauffement.A graphic showing a map of North America with colors indicating the probability in 2050 of days spent annually at extreme temperatures in a scenario based on the world’s current path on climate change.

Répercussions sur les activités

Le moment est venu de se préparer aux risques climatiques associés à la chaleur extrême, en particulier pour les entreprises qui exercent leurs activités dans des régions où les températures extrêmes devraient devenir de plus en plus fréquentes. Si les entreprises exerçant leurs activités dans certaines des régions les plus chaudes doivent aujourd’hui se préparer à des épisodes de chaleur plus fréquents, il est également important que les chefs d’entreprise cernent les endroits où leurs activités n’ont pas subi de chaleur extrême par le passé, mais où un impact pourrait être observé dans les décennies à venir.

Le sondage de 2023 mené par l’Institut pour le climat de BMO auprès des dirigeants d’entreprise a révélé que 34 % des répondants américains et canadiens déclarent que les phénomènes météorologiques violents, y compris les vagues de chaleur, ont déjà un impact sur leurs activités. En outre, 31 % des répondants déclarent que les perturbations opérationnelles sont au cœur de leurs préoccupations au chapitre des changements climatiques.

Dans le cadre de l’élaboration de leurs plans climatiques, les chefs d’entreprise devront tenir compte de l’impact de la chaleur extrême sur l’ensemble de leur chaîne de valeur, y compris sur les clients et les employés. Dans le cadre de son ambition d’être le principal partenaire de ses clients dans la transition vers la carboneutralité, BMO s’est engagée à aider ses clients à comprendre le risque climatique, à intégrer les meilleures données scientifiques accessibles sur le climat et les analyses géospatiales pour éclairer la façon dont nous soutenons nos clients et les collectivités dans lesquelles nous exerçons nos activités, et à fournir des outils, tels que Climate Smart, pour aider les entreprises à comprendre leur empreinte carbone et à réduire leurs émissions.

Pour en savoir plus sur le risque climatique, consultez les publications suivantes de l’Institut pour le climat de BMO :

LIRE LA SUITE

Disponible en anglais seulement

Jane Gilbert:

Cities are getting hotter not only because of climate change, but how we develop. More buildings and asphalts, more waste heat from vehicles and buildings, HVAC systems, less trees, less vegetation. All of this results in our urban environments being up to 10 degrees hotter than the surrounding natural areas.

Michael Torrance:

Welcome to Sustainability Leaders. I'm Michael Torrance, Chief Sustainability Officer with BMO Financial Group. On the show, we will talk with leading sustainability practitioners from the corporate, investor, academic, and NGO communities to explore how this rapidly evolving field of sustainability is impacting global investment, business practices and our world.

Speaker 3:

The views expressed here are those of the participants and not those of Bank of Montreal, it's affiliates or subsidiaries.

George Sutherland:

Hi there. My name is George Sutherland from the BMO Climate Institute. In today's episode of Sustainability Leaders, we'll be talking about trends in extreme heat and their intersection with our social and economic systems, as well as the actions that people, communities, and governments can take to help mitigate these impacts.

While temperatures may be starting to cool in the Northern Hemisphere autumn, a retrospective look at this past summer shows that it was the warmest on record and with these elevated temperatures come more frequent and severe heat waves. To help me unpack this, I'm joined by Jane Gilbert, Chief Heat Officer for Miami-Dade County. Jane was the first chief heat officer named globally and is one of the few people to hold this title. Thank you for joining me, Jane.

Jane Gilbert:

It's a pleasure.

George Sutherland:

Now the title of chief heat officer is likely new to many. So to begin our discussion, could you describe what the responsibilities are for a chief heat officer?

Jane Gilbert:

Yes, of course. When Mayor Daniella Levin Cava, the mayor of Miami-Dade County, appointed me in May of 2021, so about two and a half years ago. She charged me with addressing the increasing health and economic impacts of rising temperatures here in Miami-Dade County. So we've looked at vulnerability assessment of who's most impacted and then engaged wide range of stakeholders in the development of our action plan. And now we're in heavy implementation mode of that plan.

George Sutherland:

So that sounds like a broad mandate with a focus on building resilience to extreme heat. And to that point, what are the current trends that you've observed related to extreme heat?

Jane Gilbert:

So we're coming off an unprecedented hot summer, but historically our trend from, say 1985, has been an average minimum temperature increase of about 2.2 degrees Fahrenheit or degrees Centigrade. But this past summer we just had dramatic increase, 10 times the number of extreme caution days. And those we define here in Miami is days where the heat index at or above 105 degrees Fahrenheit, which is a little over 40 degrees Celsius.

And historically, just in the last 14 years with climate change baked in, we've had about six days out of the year where we've hit those heat indices of 105 or more, 40 degrees Celsius or more. This past summer we had over 60 days with a heat index over 105 or more, so over 10 times the number of extreme caution days.

George Sutherland:

And why are these trends particularly concerning for people who live in cities?

Jane Gilbert:

So cities are getting hotter not only because of climate change, but how we develop. More buildings and asphalt, more waste heat from vehicles and buildings, HVAC systems, less trees, less vegetation. All of this results in our urban environments being up to 10 degrees hotter than the surrounding natural areas. And it's very unequal. So we have certain areas with 40% tree canopy that are much cooler and those tend to be higher income areas.

And then we have areas with less than 10% tree canopy, and those tend to be our lower income, more vulnerable populations that are living there. They're having to pay more to keep their homes cool. It's oppressive to walk and wait at a bus stop and they can't afford to be in an AC car. So these are the areas that we need to double down our investments.

George Sutherland:

And listeners may be familiar with the term of the urban heat island effect, which you're referring to. This is the idea that's due to the concrete and the asphalt surfaces as well as heat output from vehicles and buildings, and also the corresponding loss in natural spaces. Cities tend to be hotter than the surrounding countryside.

Jane Gilbert:

Yes.

George Sutherland:

Now more than half of the world's population lives in cities. And as a result of that, most of the world's economic activity is also concentrated in cities. And we see that at the same time, cities are expected to grow larger with continued trends in urbanization while they are also simultaneously projected to get hotter as climate change is locally intensified in cities by the urban heat island effect.

So it strikes me that there are some important economic implications associated with this, and I wonder if you could speak to what some of those economic or financial impacts of extreme heat can be?

Jane Gilbert:

Yes. One of the largest economic impacts that we're feeling right now is lost labor productivity due to extreme temperatures. Organization, the Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center, did a study of globally some of the impacts due to labor productivity loss alone, the economic impacts, and looked at 12 cities globally including the Miami metropolitan area.

And they found that we are currently experiencing about $10 billion economic impact due to high temperatures causing lost labor productivity, lost time on the job, and that is projected to double by mid-century to $20 billion a year.

George Sutherland:

So these are substantial economic impacts, and layered on top of that are also the social costs of extreme heat. Could you speak to this as well?

Jane Gilbert:

So I started to talk a little bit earlier about the difficulty people can have with staying cool at home affordably. That is a big piece. Our lower income populations, a large group of them are paying very high utility costs just to stay cool, or they're having to opt to not turn on the AC and then put themselves and their families in harm's way with the levels of heat. And so it's a difficult choice they're making. We also have over 300,000 outdoor workers in Miami-Dade County that are increasingly exposed to those high temperatures.

In other words, those 105 degree temperature days that are getting more intense as we get hotter. So that's another impact. People that get to work by public transit and walking, we've had people end up in the emergency room because they had to wait at a bus stop that was unshaded for too long. So all of these are... And then there's just quality of life changes, right? Kids in summer camp can't be outside as much, or parents can't take their kids to the playground. It's in all times of day and times a year. So those are some definite quality of life impacts as well.

George Sutherland:

And you've touched on this earlier, but just to unpack in further detail, you mentioned that urban spaces aren't created equally. So what does this mean for how extreme heat is experienced across cities and what inequities exist?

Jane Gilbert:

So when we did our vulnerability assessment for Miami-Dade County, I really wanted to understand what populations were having the highest rates of heat-related illnesses and where those were. And so we looked at heat-related emergency department visits and hospitalizations by zip code. And we have great disparity. We have some zip codes with four and five times the rate of heat-related emergency department visits and hospitalizations and other zip codes in Miami-Dade County.

And the top correlating factors are high poverty rates, high land surface temperatures, so our urban heat islands, and high percentage of outdoor workers. So people living in these low tree canopy, high asphalt, dense areas are really suffering more from this significantly. We also partnered with our university partners on placing sensors in different areas of the county.

And they too found that when the national weather surface is projecting a certain temperature based on, say the forecasting at the Miami International Airport. There are other neighborhoods that could be experiencing up to 10 degrees higher temperature than that and not be aware that it's actually extremely dangerous where they are.

George Sutherland:

And this drives home what we already know, which is that the transition to a low carbon future must be inclusive. So what is required to make urban spaces more resilient to heat extremes while ensuring that this is achieved in an equitable and an inclusive manner?

Jane Gilbert:

So there are two big interventions that we're investing in that both address helping low income people adapt to extreme heat, but also address our low carbon future. So one is to increase our investments in home weatherization programs and energy efficient retrofits and making sure that we're providing not only passive but active, highly efficient cooling retrofits for people's homes so that they can bring their utility costs down. We can bring our greenhouse gas emissions down at the same time.

The other area is doubling down on tree planting and tree preservation efforts in our areas with less than 20% tree canopy in greater than 20% poverty rates. 90% of our investments last year, we increased our funding last year by 2.5 million. We're increasing it again this year to 3 million. So we've been increasing each year and we just got a $10 million Inflation Reduction Act grant for the next five years.

So we're doubling down on our tree canopy enhancement, particularly in these urban heat island areas. So both those tree planting and those energy efficient retrofits really help all of us transition to that cleaner energy economy and to address our urban heat islands.

George Sutherland:

And what type of initiatives has Miami-Dade County implemented to advance this?

Jane Gilbert:

So our plan has three main goal areas. One is to inform and prepare people. So we declared May 1st through October 31st as an official heat season, and our goal is to raise public awareness on the level that Miami-Dade County has raised public awareness and preparedness around hurricanes. And so we've done bus shelter, bus stop ads, particularly in the zip codes with the highest rates of heat-related illnesses, radio spots, television, social media.

But also trained community disaster volunteers, trained summer camp providers, trained our cooling site staff and partnered with the healthcare community on enhancing the healthcare practitioners understanding of how to look at how chronic high heat exposure can exacerbate other existing conditions and make sure they're asking the right questions and coding those illnesses correctly. So a lot of training and outreach. That's the first goal area. Also in that is to work towards protecting our outdoor workers.

So we held three trainings for employers to put in health safety plans. In the United States, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is in the process of creating a heat safety standard, but right now they don't have one. So there's only guidelines. So we're working towards potentially having an official heat standard for Miami-Dade County. That's another policy we're working on.

Certainly we've updated the policy for all our own county workers and are rolling out those trainings and making sure that all our workers under our care are protected from that heat. So that's all within that first goal area. The second one is to help people cool their homes. And so we talked a little bit about upping weather mitigation programs, multifamily retrofits, but also to make sure that our cooling sites have backup power and can operate in the event of a widespread power outage.

Then last is that tree canopy and that urban heat island mitigation. So in addition to all the tree planting that I mentioned earlier, we're going to be piloting cool pavements and looking at enhancing our access to drinking water and water features more broadly in the public realm.

George Sutherland:

You mentioned cool pavement as one of the solutions. Could you share a bit more on how this is being applied?

Jane Gilbert:

Sure. So a cool pavement is a pavement that has what's called a high albedo, a high reflectivity, just like cool roofs. We already have a requirement in Miami-Dade County that all low slope roofs have to meet a certain albedo level. This is similar, although it's not as standardized as the cool roofs. In other words, it hasn't been as well tested out there.

LA and Phoenix have rolled out pretty strong pavement pilots and programs, and we're looking to do some of the same to understand where does that work well, how well does it stay up over time, maintained over time, because a white pavement can get pretty dirty over time, and so we're looking and piloting it, but it has been shown to be able to reduce urban heat island effect.

George Sutherland:

And are there examples of other cities that are leading through action?

Jane Gilbert:

Absolutely. There are a lot. In fact, I now have seven or eight other chief heat officers around the globe that I get to interact with on an ongoing basis. But even beyond that, there are cities like Boston or Tucson, Arizona or Austin, Texas that I've interacted with that have been doing great work on heat without a chief heat officer. And even in Canada, I've interacted with some folks up in Canada interested in learning more about what we're doing here and acting on initiating their own heat action plans.

George Sutherland:

And is action only limited to governments, or are there also things that homeowners or communities can do to help protect themselves against extreme heat?

Jane Gilbert:

Absolutely. We need all hands on deck to address these issues. So as individuals, we can protect, we can learn how to note, how to protect ourselves, our loved ones, our workers from the impacts of extreme heat, and make sure that we take those precautions.

As homeowners, we can retrofit our homes to make them highly efficient and bring down both the costs, but the emissions that are associated with those homes, and certainly in our neighborhoods, to advocate for more trees, less pavement, ideally native plantings that can preserve the habitat, help absorb storm water and filter the storm water in addition to cooling down the neighborhood.

George Sutherland:

What resources can people explore to learn more?

Jane Gilbert:

I think the Biden administration has put together a very effective website. It's called heat.gov, so I encourage people to take a look at that. And then the Arsht-Rock Resilience Center created an extreme heat action platform for local governments that are looking to create their own action plans. It's sort of a primer on how to do that.

George Sutherland:

And we'll include links for those resources in the show notes. Lastly, in a few weeks, world leaders will be gathered at COP28 in Dubai to negotiate progress on global climate goals. What are you watching for and hoping to see come out of this meeting?

Jane Gilbert:

So some of the most powerful agreements that have come out of previous COPs have been at the sub-national level led by cities. And cities are, as you mentioned at the beginning of this interview, the drivers of population growth and economics and greenhouse gas emissions. So we have the potential to really address issues at that level.

So I would hope that a coalition of subnational governments get together and commit to addressing urban heat islands through also means that will bring down greenhouse gas emissions from the built environment and from the transportation sector, as well as investing in nature-based solutions in tree canopy. And so that's what I would really like to see from COP28.

George Sutherland:

Well, Jane, thank you very much for joining me to discuss trends in extreme heat, how this intersects with our urban environment and what can be done to mitigate these impacts.

Jane Gilbert:

Well, it was my pleasure, George.

George Sutherland:

That's Jane Gilbert, Chief Heat Officer for Miami-Dade County. Stay tuned for more episodes of Sustainability Leaders where we will host leading experts and continue to explore the impacts of climate change on our social, financial, and natural systems.

Michael Torrance:

Thanks for listening to Sustainability Leaders. This podcast is presented by BMO Financial Group. To access all the resources we discussed in today's episode and to see our other podcasts, visit us at bmo.com/sustainabilityleaders. You can listen and subscribe free to our show on Apple Podcasts or your favorite podcast provider, and we'll greatly appreciate a rating and review and any feedback that you might have.

Our show and resources are produced with support from BMO's marketing team and Puddle Creative. Until next time, I'm Michael Torrance. Have a great week.

Speaker 6:

For BMO disclosures, please visit bmocm.com/podcast/disclaimer.

George Sutherland Senior Conseiller, changements climatiques et durabilité

PARTIE 1

Climate Change & Flood Risk: Implications for Real Estate Markets

George Sutherland 02 novembre 2021

  Disponible en anglais seulement. “We're not going backward on climate change. Climate change has happened, is happening, and w…




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