Skip to main content

Trying to shrink carbon footprint? Think small


A street in a neighborhood of brownstones with the road lined with cars on both sides
|
September 14, 2015

For cities trying to shrink their carbon footprint, researchers at Arizona State University and a number of other institutions say one solution is to look at the emissions of individual buildings and communities, rather than cities as a whole.

In a recent commentary published in Nature, ASU researchers Kevin Gurney and Nancy Grimm, both with ASU School of Life Sciences, and the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering’s Mikhail Chester, state that cutting carbon emissions by putting more electric cars on the road or generating more clean energy only fixes a small percentage of global urban CO2 emissions.

According to the scientists, if city managers handled emissions the same way they handled regional development, transport planning and waste disposal — at the scale of a house or road — it would be easier to see where a city’s “carbon hot spots” are located. From there, city officials could target their efforts to curb emissions in areas that are actually contributing most to the problem of greenhouse gas emissions.

The problem with this method, however, is that gathering such specific data is beyond the ability of most city planners. Despite this, the group of researchers suggests that city managers use data already being gathered by scientists from around the world. As long as the research community can translate the information into a form that is usable, the scientists say everyone will benefit.

Article: http://www.nature.com/news/climate-change-track-urban-emissions-on-a-hu… 

Source: Nature 

Editor's Note: Links are included for informational purposes only. Due to varying editorial policies, news publications may remove or change a link for archival purposes at any time without notice.

Top photo by cmart7327/iStock

More Science and technology

 

Palo Verde Blooms

Associate professor shares her journey from NASA to ASU

From leading space missions to designing and building spaceflight hardware and training students in space science and engineering, Arizona State University is proving that space is more than a…

A crowd observes G. Don Taylor speak in a classroom

Famed systems engineer inspires ASU to tackle global problems

“Providing great talent with great opportunity can make a great difference.” Such was a key part of the message delivered by G. Don Taylor, executive vice provost and the Charles O. Gordon Professor…

Stock photo of woman with head in hands and stress drawings displayed around her

The science behind chronic stress

Stress comes in many shapes and sizes. There’s the everyday stress of preparing for a final exam or being stuck in traffic. And the more significant stress of losing a friend, family member,…