ICUC12-709, updated on 05 Sep 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/icuc12-709
12th International Conference on Urban Climate
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Inter-comparison of present and future urban climates of three cities considering multiple CMIP6 scenarios and urbanization
Xiao Jin1, Alvin C.G. Varquez2, Ngoc Khanh Do3, Ihara Tomohiko4, Itsubo Norihiro5, Manabu kanda6, and Atsushi Inagaki7
Xiao Jin et al.
  • 1Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (jin.x.ac@m.titech.ac.jp)
  • 2Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (varquez.a.aa@m.titech.ac.jp)
  • 3Shibaura Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan (hanhdn@shibaura-it.ac.jp)
  • 4The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (ihara-t@k.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
  • 5Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan (itsubo-n@waseda.jp)
  • 6Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (kanda.m.aa@m.titech.ac.jp)
  • 7Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (inagaki.a.ab@m.titech.ac.jp)

Rising climate risks in urban areas, driven by global warming and rapid urbanization, pose significant challenges to thermal comfort and urban sustainability. Global warming and urbanization effects on megacities remain uncertain. While considering urbanization in the form of spatial changes in urban parameters and anthropogenic heating (AH), this study models the present and future climate of Tokyo, Cairo, and Jakarta in 2050 under three CMIP6-based Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP126, SSP245, and SSP370) at 1.5-km spatial resolution. To incorporate both global warming and detailed urban distributions, we used the pseudo-global warming (PGW) method and the WRF model 4.6, which explicitly considers the spatial distribution of urban parameters and AH in the single-layer urban canopy modeling framework. Extending our focus beyond temperature changes to thermal comfort, we further estimated the UTCI from the empirical UTCI-Fiala model. Results show global warming has a greater overall impact on air temperature and UTCI increases compared to future urbanization and AH change, with the effect intensifying from SSP126 to SSP245 to SSP370 and UTCI rising more sharply. However, urbanization and AH changes introduce significant spatial variability in temperature and UTCI changes within each city, with some locations having similar scale of increases as background climate. Global warming scenarios evidently influence the temperature increases from present to future across all cities, with monthly variations driven by seasonal differences. Additionally, the influence of urbanization on temperature and UTCI varies across seasons and cities. The mechanisms behind them are further examined by inspecting other modeled meteorological variables, such as climate-change influence on background winds and precipitation. From feature importance analysis, we find that while the overall urbanization effect on temperature and UTCI change remains consistent across scenarios, variations arise due to differing influences of urbanization on other factors, such as mean radiation temperature, wind speed, and relative humidity.

How to cite: Jin, X., Varquez, A. C. G., Do, N. K., Tomohiko, I., Norihiro, I., kanda, M., and Inagaki, A.: Inter-comparison of present and future urban climates of three cities considering multiple CMIP6 scenarios and urbanization, 12th International Conference on Urban Climate, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 7–11 Jul 2025, ICUC12-709, https://doi.org/10.5194/icuc12-709, 2025.

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