Sun-reflecting cities the way of the future?

Light-coloured materials help reflect the Sun's rays rather than absorb and convert them into heat, a phenomenon known as albedo in scientific terms.

Light-coloured materials help reflect the Sun's rays rather than absorb and convert them into heat, a phenomenon known as albedo in scientific terms.

Published Apr 14, 2012

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Paris - Scientists sketched a vision on Friday of converting the world's cities into giant sunlight reflectors to help fight global warming but met with scepticism from fellow academics.

Gradually replacing traditional urban roofs and roads with white or lighter-coloured materials would yield a cooling benefit that, over 50 years, would be the equivalent of a reduction of between 25 and 150 billion tons of carbon dioxide (CO2), researchers in Canada said.

At the top end of the scale, this equals the emissions of all the world's cars over the same period, their study published in Britain's Institute of Physics' journal Environmental Research Letters stated.

Light-coloured materials help reflect the Sun's rays rather than absorb and convert them into heat, a phenomenon known as albedo in scientific terms.

Pavements and roofs make up more than 60 percent of urban surfaces and, by trapping solar energy, are largely to blame for “heat islands”, where cities or districts become local hotspots.

Urban heat islands also gobble up energy in air conditioning and inflict health costs through smog.

The cost of reflectors need not be prohibitive as rooftops and paved surfaces need to be resurfaced every so often anyway, the scientists argued.

“All it means is that when the time comes, they would select a cool roof,” Hashem Akbari of Concordia University in Montreal told AFP.

He conceded that some of the new materials may be slightly more expensive than before, but the cost would still be “lower than the ... savings they produce” in cooling.

French climate consultant Jean-Marc Jancovici, however, said the proposals would have only a localised effect.

“If you decrease significantly the temperature in local places with something like painting the roofs in white, it doesn't ensure that you will have a decrease in the temperature in remote places,” he said.

Alfredo Stein of the Global Urban Research Centre at Britain's University of Manchester also predicted practical difficulties, particularly for the world's sprawling slum areas.

“It will require very strong advocacy by whoever will be selling the roofs,” he told AFP, especially considering that about 70 percent of houses worldwide are built by the owners themselves, mainly in informal settlements.

People's choices for roofing materials are largely determined by affordability and availability, Stein argued.

In a 2009 probe into so-called geo-engineering options to brake global warming, Britain's Royal Society gave low marks to “white roof” methods.

There would be benefits locally in hot countries, it said.

But only 0.05 to one percent of the world's land surface would be covered, which meant it would lack effectiveness on a global scale, the prestigious academy said.

And it estimated the cost at “about $300 billion a year, making this one of the least effective and most expensive methods considered.” - Sapa-AFP

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