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There's a reason that summers in the city are so hot.
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And it's probably easiest to explain why with thermal vision.
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It shows the heat all around me and also the coldness of this ice cream cone.
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Cities are often hotter than their suburbs due to a phenomenon known as the heat island effect.
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All of that asphalt, concrete, dark rooftops and tall buildings, they absorb and store heat.
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And there are a lot of people using a lot of energy—driving cars, riding subways, running the AC.
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All of these materials and activities either create or retain heat.
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And all that stored heat causes steeper nighttime highs when people would otherwise have a chance to cool down.
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The way all these heat-storing elements are laid out matters quite a bit.
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In cities laid out in grids, like Phoenix, Chicago, or Washington, D.C., the buildings are closer together, like closely packed coals in a fire, keeping heat in.
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More space between buildings creates more circulation.
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Another way to combat this heat island effect is through green space.
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Parks, trees, plants, they don't absorb as much heat.
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They actually send water back into the atmosphere.
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Between all those hot buildings, that cools things off.
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Another solution is color.
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Light colors reflect sunlight back into the atmosphere instead of storing it as heat.
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It's easiest to see in crosswalks, and it's true for the color of buildings and other urban surfaces, too.
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And one long-game way to combat the heat island effect is to avoid using air conditioning when you don't need it.
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AC uses a ton of electricity and creates a feedback loop.
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When we get that electricity from coal or natural gas, that puts more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, which warms the planet making cities even hotter.
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But this isn't just about comfort.
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Today, heat waves kill more people than any other extreme weather event.
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More than tornadoes, hurricanes and even floods.
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City populations keep growing, and those cities are only getting hotter.
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This is Let's Talk, NPR's news explainer show.
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Make sure to subscribe to our YouTube channel and check out other shows.
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I'm Christopher Joyce, and this is NPR.