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Trees halve urban heat island effect globally but unequal benefits only modestly mitigate climate-change warming

  • Robert I. McDonald
  • , T. C. Chakraborty
  • , Theodore A. Endreny
  • , Luke A. Parsons
  • , Mariami Marsagishvili
  • , Manuel Esperon-Rodriguez
  • The Nature Conservancy
  • City University of New York
  • Humboldt University of Berlin
  • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
  • The Nature Conservancy in Europe

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Although tree cover reduces the urban heat island, no global estimate quantifies air temperature reductions by contemporary or future tree cover, currently and with climate change. Here, we estimate these reductions for all 8,919 large urban areas. Current urban tree cover mitigates 41-49% of the maximum potential air-temperature urban heat island that would occur in the absence of tree canopy. Tree canopy reduces summer air temperature by a population-weighted mean of 0.15 ± 0.03 °C, with wide variation (0.0-2.7 °C), benefiting 914 (805-1040, 95% CI) million people by >0.25 °C. Cooling benefits are greater in already cooler areas: high-income countries and suburbs. Current and plausible future tree cover mitigate only ~10% (6.7-18% and 6.3-17%, respectively) of the median mid-century climate-change warming under a moderate emission scenario. Our results suggest tree canopy expansion in densely settled low-income urban areas is necessary for equitable urban heat island mitigation and climate adaptation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3569
Number of pages12
JournalNature Communications
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 May 2026

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