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Satellite-Based Ranking of the World’s Hottest and Coldest Cities Reveals Inequitable Distribution of Temperature Extremes

Jiufeng Li, Wenfeng Zhan, TC Chakraborty, Zihan Liu, Huilin Du, Weilin Liao, Ming Luo, Long Li, Shiqi Miao, Huyan Fu, Shasha Wang, Fan Huang, Manchun Li

2023Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The identification of the world’s hottest and coldest cities fascinates both the public and the scientific community. However, the ranking of city temperatures, especially from the perspective of human discomfort, has been difficult. Here we estimated the monthly mean maximum and minimum 1-km resolution urban temperatures of 13,135 cities worldwide (2003–19) from the thermal discomfort perspective by combining in situ measurements, satellite-based land surface temperatures, fine-resolution intracity data, and reanalysis data. Manama, Bahrain, was identified as the hottest city (48.18° ± 1.31°C) and Yakutsk, Russia (−42.96° ± 0.72°C), as the coldest city. The global city temperatures followed a power-law pattern, characterized by cities with <0.3 million inhabitants covering 80% of the top 20% global cities with extreme temperatures. Our study reveals an inequitable pattern of global city temperature extremes and highlights the urgency of developing appropriate strategies to reduce climate change risks in small- and medium-sized cities with low development levels.

Topics & Concepts

GeographyRanking (information retrieval)SatelliteClimatologyClimate changeGlobal warmingMeteorologyDistribution (mathematics)Environmental sciencePhysical geographyOceanographyGeologyEngineeringMathematicsAerospace engineeringMathematical analysisComputer scienceMachine learningUrban Heat Island MitigationLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesRemote Sensing and Land Use
Satellite-Based Ranking of the World’s Hottest and Coldest Cities Reveals Inequitable Distribution of Temperature Extremes | Litcius