From: [email protected] by E&E Publishing [email protected] Subject: From ClimateWire -- TRANSPORTATION: Researchers find 'hidden benefits' of electric vehicles -- they can make cities cooler, healthier Date: March 20, 2015 at 11:21 AM To: [email protected], [email protected] This ClimateWire story was sent to you by: [email protected] AN E&E PUBLISHING SERVICE TRANSPORTATION: Researchers find 'hidden benefits' of electric vehicles -- they can make cities cooler, healthier Benjamin Hulac, E&E reporter Published: Friday, March 20, 2015 The world's most compact and industrial cities, with limited greenery, smothering blacktop and hardened buildings, amplify climate change effects by trapping and retaining heat. Scientists describe the phenomenon as the "urban heat island effect," or UHIE. Public health officials often link its presence to heat wave deaths, and grid operators chart spikes in power surges and outages on cities' hottest days worldwide. By examining energy use and heat island intensity in Beijing, a city of 21 million that has come to represent the brunt of steady global warming, a study published yesterday in Scientific Reports outlined a man-made response to a man-made problem: electric vehicles. According to the authors, phasing out conventional cars and trucks for plug-in electric vehicles in cities that suffer from UHIE would generate a pair of "hidden benefits." Electric vehicles emit significantly less heat than conventional vehicles, and more EVs would ease the load on a city's power grid by reducing demand from air conditioners and, in turn, mitigating heat island intensity, the study found. Heat emitted from air conditioning and vehicles are the two root causes of UHIE, the authors said. In 2012 in Beijing, which had 5.2 million vehicles at the time, EVs on average emitted about 20 percent of what conventional vehicles did over the same distance. Swapping them out for their electrified rivals in the summer of 2012 would have lowered the intensity of the heat island effect 0.94 degree Celsius. "Heat waves kill and, in terms of climate change, even 1 degree can make a difference," said Jianguo Liu, one of the report authors and the director of the Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability at Michigan State University, in a statement. and Sustainability at Michigan State University, in a statement. "It's easy not to see the big picture on issues like electric cars and global warming," he said, "but when we look with a holistic approach, we find these unexpected connections." As cities like Beijing cook in the summertime, residents switch on their cooling systems. In the summer of 2012, the substitution of EVs would also have cut greenhouse gas emissions for Beijing by about 10,500 metric tons per day by reducing power demand by roughly 14.50 million kilowatt-hours -- electricity specifically for air conditioning. In their analysis, the authors did not account for any change in the ground surfaces in Beijing, a root cause of UHIE, but simply replaced the emissions from combustion vehicles with emissions from electric vehicles in their calculations. Taking advantage of an 'inevitable trend' Changing street and sidewalk surfaces, growing public transit systems and expanding green spaces, such as parks, are all methods to address heat island effects. But, Liu said, the impacts of shifting to more EVs may be more significant and practical than other options. "Because land in cities is [pricey] and there are huge demands for the limited land, there is a limit in terms of how much more green space can be added and how much surfaces of the cities can be changed," Liu said in an emailed response. "Even with increasing public transit, it is still more convenient to use individual vehicles under many circumstances." Plug-in electric cars will eventually replace conventional gasoline and diesel automobiles, according to the researchers, who call such a transition an "inevitable trend around the world." But, they note, EVs require more energy to manufacture than combustion engine vehicles. China is the world's biggest carbon emitter. It unloaded about 8.25 megatons' worth of heattrapping gases in 2012, according to the International Energy Agency, approximately a quarter of global emissions for that year. The global tally in 2012 was roughly 32 megatons. (One megaton equals 1 million metric tons.) Yet the positive byproducts from more plug-in cars and trucks in cities could be far greater than the study indicates, Liu said. "We were surprised by the hidden effects and their magnitudes even in one city," he said of his peers and their results. "Globally, the effects would be much larger." While China remains one of the biggest economic engines that drive the global economy, it is certainly not the only country whose citizens suffer from the heat island effect. A separate study published in late January concluded that heat waves have grown increasingly common in the last 40 years and are at their worst in urban areas. increasingly common in the last 40 years and are at their worst in urban areas. Dennis Lettenmaier, a geography professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, and his co-authors studied the heat patterns of 217 urban areas worldwide from 1973 to 2012 and concluded that periods of extreme heat "increased significantly" in 48 percent of those cities during that period. More than half of the world lives in cities, a shift from the decades following World War II. As emerging economies expand, that ratio is projected to only get more lopsided, according to many demographic projections. According to U.N. analysis released in 2011, 59 percent of humans will live in urban areas by 2030. Cities today account for about 70 percent of the greenhouse gas emissions but cover 2 percent of the world's surface. Want to read more stories like this? Click here to start a free trial to E&E -- the best way to track policy and markets. ABOUT CLIMATEWIRE – THE POLITICS AND BUSINESS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ClimateWire is written and produced by the staff of E&E Publishing, LLC. It is designed to provide comprehensive, daily coverage of all aspects of climate change issues. From international agreements on carbon emissions to alternative energy technologies to state and federal GHG programs, ClimateWire plugs readers into the information they need to stay abreast of this sprawling, complex issue. 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