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MPP 655: Policy Making for Sustainable Urban Communities Module 7: Solutions: Green Infrastructure – Part 1 Hello, and welcome to module #7, solutions, green infrastructure, which is part of MPP 655, policy-making for sustainable urban communities. What we are going to talk about today is the idea of green infrastructure. Green infrastructure is the counterpoint to the idea of gray infrastructure. That is to say, gray infrastructure is built infrastructure, roads, parking lots, sewage lines, electrical, heating, cooling, those kinds of things, that we build to maintain the comfort that we have for urban living. So, three broad categories that emerge in this idea of green infrastructure: there is the idea of urban heat island mitigation, which we will talk about in some detail. There is the idea of urban forestry, and xeriscape and native vegetation, and habitat conservation and restoration, having to do with the landscape, primarily. Those kinds of solutions. Bioswales, things like that. Then we will talk about storm water retention and groundwater recharge. What is called low-impact development, which is a way of developing land that minimizes the amount of storm water runoff that you get. So you have more porous pavement; things like that. And we will talk a little bit about the idea of day-lighting streams and rivers. Many streams and rivers, in the process of urbanization in many urban environments, such as Los Angeles, have been paved over over the years. Streams have been put into culverts, have been put into drainage ditches, sewer lines, and so on and so forth. So the idea of daylighting streams and rivers is that you expose them to daylight. You open them up and allow them free play across the landscape. Let's take the idea of urban heat islands first and talk about this. What we have realized over the years is that urbanized areas tend to be something like 4 and 8 degrees Fahrenheit hotter than the countryside. This is primarily because of darker surfaces, roofs and paving, asphalt, things like that; the fact that there is less vegetation usually in urbanized areas; and so you get less evaporative transpiration, that is to say, plants sucking up moisture from the soil and releasing it into the atmosphere, thus cooling the atmosphere; and then we have more heat-generating machines, central air-conditioning, things like that. That generate heat in and of themselves. When you look at a profile of what an urban heat island looks like, [on the board], it goes something like this. You have the rural areas are generally the lowest in terms of temperature; and then as you get into suburban areas, the temperature goes up. And then as you get into downtown areas it peaks sharply, and then as you move outward back to rural areas, the temperature tends to drop, and peaks a little bit in Page 1 MPP 655: Policy Making for Sustainable Urban Communities suburban areas, drops particularly in parklands and things like that, and then drops again in the rural areas. This is one way of thinking about the urban heat island. We have measured evidence that this is true, and the question is, does it matter? How does it matter? And what can we do about it? It matters because heat islands tend to increase air pollution, energy consumption, and storm water runoff. All three are concerns for us, and we build gray infrastructure to compensate for these effects. My argument is that we could use green infrastructure instead to countervail each of these three adverse impacts, and this would lead us to an urbanized area that is more beneficial to humans, and less costly for us to maintain. So ozone formation, we will talk a little bit about how it is that ozone formation is linked to the heat island effect. How could it be that just simply increasing the temperature of a place, by putting down asphalt and other heat-absorbing surfaces increases tropospheric ozone formation? Smog, is what it is called. Particulate matter gets increased, and heat stress gets increased. Energy consumption, quite obviously, with air-conditioning and so on and so forth, there is an increased load on energy. If you could cool the urban areas by two to four degrees Fahrenheit you could reduce energy consumption accordingly. And then storm water runoff – many of the surfaces that are heat absorbing tend to be as well impervious surfaces, and being impervious surfaces causes storm water runoff. Here, [on the board], is a chart of what is called albedo, the heat reflecting property of surfaces. You see asphalt here (bottom center), is close to zero. Pure black is 0 and pure white is 1. And that is the scale upon which albedo is measured, and so trees are between 0.15 to 0.18. Porous colored paints, red and brown tiles, tar and concrete, brick and stucco, concrete, and so on and so forth. So you get these various albedo properties, and what you are looking to do is reduce the lower numbers and increase the higher numbers. If you do that, you have reduced the albedo. I am sorry. You have increased the albedo, and thus increased the heat-reflecting properties of the area, and made it more conducive to lower temperatures. Asphalt makes for higher temperatures, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is experimenting with various kinds of asphalt coating that might help increase the albedo, and reduce the temperatures. Here is a chart that shows the relationship between temperature -- I'm sorry. Maximum daily ozone concentrations on the vertical scale, and temperature on the horizontal scale. And for two areas, Atlanta, Georgia and New York City, you will Page 2 MPP 655: Policy Making for Sustainable Urban Communities see a difference in the pattern because the variation in temperature is much higher in New York than it is in Atlanta. Atlanta being a southern city, and tends to have a tighter cluster of temperatures. But in general, what you see is a trend upward. As temperature increases, ozone concentrations increase. This is strictly a temperature relationship, that does not have anything to do with emissions of gases and so forth. Simply by increasing the temperature, you increase the amount of ozone that is formed. What you have to understand about ozone is that it is not an emitted gas. It is formed in the atmosphere from other gases that are emitted from various sources. For instance, automobiles will emit volatile organic compounds and oxides of nitrogen, and these mix in the lower atmosphere. When they are hit by sunlight, there is a photochemical reaction that takes place. This photochemical reaction is temperature-sensitive. So for the same volume of gases that are present in the lower atmosphere, if you increase the temperature, you increase the reactivity of those gases, and thus increase the amount of tropospheric ozone that is formed. There are two potential heat island mitigation strategies, broadly speaking. One of them is surface albedo modification, and the other is urban revegetation. If you increase the albedo, you increase the heat reflective properties of surfaces, and therefore allow less absorption of heat, and so less heating of the lower atmosphere. And if you increase urban revegetation, trees provide shade; but trees and shrubs and other kinds of vegetation provide evaporative transpiration, and so they are cooling the atmosphere. So, lighter-colored materials and thermal materials. These are the two strategies within surface albedo modification. The basic principle is that if you have an ordinary roof, it absorbs heat and heats up the space within. If you have a heatreflecting roof, then it reflects the heat away and the room, the space below the roof becomes cooler. Here is a chart, [on the board], showing the relationship between temperature differences between the roof surface and the air, and solar reactivity. White paint has a high reflective property, and black paint has very low heat reflective properties. So this makes for a cooler roof, and gives us a way in which we can begin to mitigate urban heat island effects. White roofs are a classic example. Just paint the roof white and that reduces the temperature within by a few degrees Fahrenheit or centigrade. Green roofs are another kind of strategy that is used, [on the board], where you plant shrubs and grasses and other kinds of vegetation on the roof itself. There are many kinds of green roofs. We can talk about this in more detail. There Page 3 MPP 655: Policy Making for Sustainable Urban Communities are intensive roofs and extensive roofs. This, [on the board], is an example of an extensive roof. Here is an example from Chicago. A green roof, where various native plants are being grown to cool the spaces below, and reduce the amount of heat that is absorbed by the roof itself. There are air quality benefits from urban heat island mitigation, we find. As we saw before, ozone formation is one way in which we improve air quality. But more than that, there is a 10 to 15 percent reduction in volatile organic compounds from running losses in mobile sources. That is to say, the amount of lost gases, volatile organic compounds, that are put out by mobile sources are themselves reduced, simply because the temperature, the ambient temperature has been reduced. There is a 15 to 30% reduction in volatile organic emissions from parked vehicles. If you provide shade trees in parking lots, and so on and so forth. There is a reduction in heat exposure to ozone, and there are additional emission reductions from area and stationary sources. Here is an estimate of the total energy saving potential of light-colored roofs. In the west, Los Angeles and Phoenix, these are high heat areas. Southern America, going up to Chicago, and toward the Northeast, where there are also examples of savings from white roofs. Urban revegetation. Tree planting, replacement of trees that have died, landscaping, xeriscaping, which is the planting of drought tolerant plants, and native plants which are adapted to the local environment, and thus do not require much irrigation. Those kinds of strategies ought to be embraced as part of an urban revegetation campaign that is looking to mitigate heat islands. Trees act in various ways to give us many kinds of benefits. The roots stabilize the soil; the trunk, branches and leaves provide evaporative transpiration. The leaves filter dangerous pollutants from the air. Acting as a net that catches dust and so forth. They provide shade; they absorb sound and block erosion-causing rainfall; and entirely help habitat for birds, animals, insects and microbes. Let's not forget microbes, which are very important to the functioning of ecosystems. Los Angeles has a “million trees” program, and you can go to this website and you can find more out about this program and what it does. [on the board]. There are various tree planting efforts around the southland that you can find out more about, and you can participate in efforts to plant new trees, provide more shade, provide increased evaporative transpiration, things of that sort. Page 4 MPP 655: Policy Making for Sustainable Urban Communities When it comes to tree planting, there are four benefit streams of large-scale treeplanting efforts. That is to say, millions of trees. If you plant millions of trees in Southern California, you'll definitely end up improving the air quality, improving energy efficiency, improving groundwater recharge, and increasing evaporative transpiration. This is a certainty. This is what we mean by green infrastructure. All these benefits being captured in the process of planting trees, besides the fact that trees are ecologically beneficial, gives us humans a reason for supporting these kinds of strategies. Improvements in air quality, again, become important to this process. Shade trees in parking lots prevent evaporative losses from automotive fuels in parked cars; mitigate greenhouse gas emissions; and reduce heat loads within automobiles – if you park in a shaded area, when you come back to your car it is not quite so hot, as I’m sure you are all aware, as if you were to park in the sunlight. You will notice if you have driven in Southern California at all, that almost every parking lot is bereft of trees. There are very few tree-covered parking lots in Southern California, and if we were to begin to address this, we would reduce air pollution significantly, reduce the amount of air conditioning load that is needed when you start up your car, and generally make for improved comfort. So there are definitely improvements in energy efficiency. Strategically-chosen and planted trees, because of the shading they provide to the built environment, cut the thermal load. Cool roofs and thermal insulation reduce indoor temperatures, albedo modification reduces urban heat island effects, and evaporative transpiration from trees, shrubs and other vegetation cut the temperature significantly. Here is a chart that you can survey at your leisure after we're done with this lecture. But it basically sets out the strategies that we can adopt for heat island mitigation, the categories across which they act, and the monetized benefits that accrue to us from a cool roof, a cool community kind of strategy. You would see the total value in this estimate, which is somewhat basic, is $535 million per year that we could be generating, simply by doing these kinds of cool roofs, trees, cool pavements, and so on and so forth. (left side). Let's break here, and then we can come to groundwater recharge and storm water management. [Session ends.] Page 5