Abstract
Radiative skin temperature is often used to examine heat exposure in
multi-city studies and for informing urban heat management efforts since
urban air temperature is rarely measured at the appropriate scales.
Cities also have lower relative humidity, which is not traditionally
accounted for in large-scale observational urban heat risk assessments.
Here using crowdsourced measurements from over 40,000 weather stations
in ≈600 urban clusters in Europe, we show the moderating effect of this
urbanization-induced humidity reduction on heat stress during the 2019
heatwave. We demonstrate that daytime differences in heat index between
urban clusters and their surroundings are weak and associations of this
urban-rural difference with background climate, generally examined from
the skin temperature perspective, is diminished due to moisture
feedback. We also examine the spatial variability of skin temperature,
air temperature, and heat indices within these clusters, relevant for
detecting hotspots and potential disparities in heat exposure, and find
that skin temperature is a poor proxy for the intra-urban distribution
of heat stress. Finally, urban vegetation shows much weaker
(~1/6th as strong) associations with
heat stress than with skin temperature, which has broad implications for
optimizing urban heat mitigation strategies. Our results are valid for
both operational metrics of heat stress (such as apparent temperature
and Humidex) and for various empirical heat indices from epidemiological
studies. This study provide large-scale empirical evidence that skin
temperature, used due to the lack of better alternatives, is weakly
suitable for informing heat mitigation strategies within and across
cities, necessitating more urban meteorological observations.