
Climate change and growing megacities: hazards and vulnerability
This paper is a review of geophysical and climatic trends associated with extreme weather events and natural hazards, their implications for urban areas and the effects of continued environmental modification due to urban expansion. It discusses how urban design, technological development and societal behaviour can either ameliorate or worsen climate-induced hazards in urban areas. Pressures – ranging from excessive rainfall causing urban flooding to urban temperature extremes driving air pollution – require more attention to understand, model and predict changes in hazards in urban areas. It concludes that involving different techniques for data analysis and system modelling is more appropriate for practical decision-making than a purely reductionist approach. Successfully determining the future environment of megacities will, however, require joint action with societally informed decision makers, grounded in sound scientific achievements.
Related content
- Authors: Nick S. Reynard
Content tools
Site Tools
No search history
Recently Viewed
-
Julian C R Hunt,Yasemin D Aktas,Alex Mahalov,Mohamed Moustaoui,Francisco SalamancaandMatei Georgescu


