Mapping the exposure and sensitivity to heat wave events in China’s megacities

The rising temperature makes the weather becoming more extreme. Understanding how extreme hot temperature—heat wave events (HWEs)—are likely to alter individual heat exposure and sensitivity is crucial for developing climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies. Despite the importance, little...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2021-02, Vol.755 (Pt 1), p.142734, Article 142734
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Juan, Meng, Bin, Pei, Tao, Du, Yunyan, Zhang, Jingqiu, Chen, Siyu, Tian, Bin, Zhi, Guoqing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The rising temperature makes the weather becoming more extreme. Understanding how extreme hot temperature—heat wave events (HWEs)—are likely to alter individual heat exposure and sensitivity is crucial for developing climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies. Despite the importance, little is known about the real-time impacts of HWEs on individual daily life in developing nations, like China. To fill this gap, we adopt over 1544 thousand Weibo (Chinese Twitter) social media data, coupled with meteorological conditions people face when posting, to assess the heat exposure and people's sensitivity to HWEs across 31 mega-cities in China. The results show the hotspot of Weibo heat is coincident with the extremely hot temperature, with a correlation of 0.7 (p 
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142734