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Application of Copernicus Data for Climate-Relevant Urban Planning Using the Example of Water, Heat, and Vegetation

  • Specific climate adaptation and resilience measures can be efficiently designed and implemented at regional and local levels. Climate and environmental databases are critical for achieving the sustainable development goals (SDGs) and for efficiently planning and implementing appropriate adaptation measures. Available federated and distributed databases can serve as necessary starting points for municipalities to identify needs, prioritize resources, and allocate investments, taking into account often tight budget constraints. High-quality geospatial, climate, and environmental data are now broadly available and remote sensing data, e.g., Copernicus services, will be critical. There are forward-looking approaches to use these datasets to derive forecasts for optimizing urban planning processes for local governments. On the municipal level, however, the existing data have only been used to a limited extent. There are no adequate tools for urban planning with which remote sensing data can be merged and meaningfully combined with local data and further processed and applied in municipal planning and decision-making. Therefore, our project CoKLIMAx aims at the development of new digital products, advanced urban services, and procedures, such as the development of practical technical tools that capture different remote sensing and in-situ data sets for validation and further processing. CoKLIMAx will be used to develop a scalable toolbox for urban planning to increase climate resilience. Focus areas of the project will be water (e.g., soil sealing, stormwater drainage, retention, and flood protection), urban (micro)climate (e.g., heat islands and air flows), and vegetation (e.g., greening strategy, vegetation monitoring/vitality). To this end, new digital process structures will be embedded in local government to enable better policy decisions for the future.

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Author:Michael Max BühlerORCiDGND, Christoph Sebald, Diana Rechid, Eberhard Baier, Alexander Michalski, Benno RothsteinGND, Konrad NübelORCiDGND, Martin Metzner, Volker SchwiegerORCiD, Jan-Albrecht HarrsORCiD, Daniela Jacob, Lothar Köhler, Gunnar in het Panhuis, Rodríguez RaymundoORCiD, Michael Herrmann, Gerd Buziek
URN:urn:nbn:de:bsz:kon4-opus4-28752
DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13183634
ISSN:2072-4292
Parent Title (English):Remote sensing
Volume:13
Publisher:MDPI
Place of publication:Basel
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Year of Publication:2021
Release Date:2021/09/13
Tag:Climate change; City resilience; Sustainable development; Urban planning; Remote sensing; Internet of things; Water management; Heat islands; Digital transformation; Data analytics
Issue:18
Page Number:17
Article Number:3634
Note:
Corresponding author: Michael Max Bühler
Institutes:Fakultät Bauingenieurwesen
Open Access?:Ja
Relevance:Peer reviewed Publikation in Master Journal List
Licence (German):License LogoCreative Commons - CC BY - Namensnennung 4.0 International