Communities of color take the ‘biggest hit’ in Los Angeles’ unequal spread of greenery
The city will see continued heatwaves, but a new study says heat-damping urban vegetation is unevenly distributed
Even as California grapples with the effects of an extremely wet winter, the threat of drought and heat lingers, especially for areas where vegetation is too sparse to blunt the dangers. The impacts are profound across these cityscapes, according to a new study that focuses specifically on Los Angeles, which also found they have a disproportionate effect on disadvantaged communities of color.
Areas now flush with green will again brown, rearing familiar hazards brought about by warming weather. And when urban vegetation - which plays a key part in keeping cities cool - grows parched and shrivels against cooking concrete, residents pay the price. Rising temperatures spike higher without greenery, spurring the cycle of drying and heating that makes landscapes even less hospitable for the remaining plants to thrive.
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