ADVERTISEMENT
Palawan Daily News
  • Home
  • Latest News
    • City
    • Provincial
    • National
    • Regional
  • Advertise
  • Online Radio
  • Opinion
  • Legal Section
  • Lifestyle
  • About the PDN
    • Contact Us
    • Ownership and Funding
No Result
View All Result
Palawan Daily News
  • Home
  • Latest News
    • City
    • Provincial
    • National
    • Regional
  • Advertise
  • Online Radio
  • Opinion
  • Legal Section
  • Lifestyle
  • About the PDN
    • Contact Us
    • Ownership and Funding
No Result
View All Result
Palawan Daily News
No Result
View All Result
Home Column

Protect people from extreme heat

Gerardo Reyes Jr by Gerardo Reyes Jr
May 8, 2024
in Column, Opinion
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
0
Transforming Puerto Princesa’s urban coastline
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Who among us are not alarmed with the surging temperatures that we have experienced since early this year with some cities in the country reaching 50 degrees Celsius?

In fact, a dangerous peak heat index of 46 degrees Celsius hounded Puerto Princesa City on April 22, 2024 while PAGASA warned that heat index this May 2024 might reachmore than 50 degrees Celsius.

RelatedPosts

Due process for the damned

Bravisimo, director

The dead don’t speak, but the living are not allowed to

The Department of Health (DOH) said that seven deaths have been recorded in the country this year.

As the temperature surges, the risks from extreme heat are also rising. Heat has always been a threat to urban living due to urban heat island (UHI). But climate change means that extreme heat now happens more frequently and more intensely compared to that in the past.

Heat can kill anywhere but the risk is greater in cities. In a study published in 2020 estimated that air temperatures in Pakistan and UAE cities have surpassed the human body’s limit of survivability on their hottest and most humid days.

For those of us living in cities, a hot, sunny day can feel brutal. Concrete buildings and asphalt roads trap heat from the sun and release it at night. Vehicle and air conditioning exhaust add to the UHI effect, in which cities stay warmer compared to their nearby areas.

It’s a fact that cities aren’t built to be cool—at least compared to uninhabited, vegetated spaces. Trees cool by providing shade and discharging moisture through their leaves. The cooling effect of a single healthy tree is equivalent to that of 10 air-conditioning units, which explains why a city’s coolest parts are those sporadically built or heavily vegetated.

Scientists said that these areas can be three to seven degrees cooler than built-up vicinities.

Climate researchers have long warned surging temperatures and increasing heat index. This means that city officials, engineers, architects, urban planners, stakeholders must work harder to incorporate extreme heat into climate-adaptation strategies.

A study in New Zealand shows that painting roofs white can keep homes cool without the need for expensive air conditioning. They call it ‘cool roofs’, which are painted white can reduce temperatures inside buildings by 2–5 °C compared with conventional roofing.

But this solution need to be done on a city-wide scale to achieve significant impact. To implement this, national government agencies and local government units need to require the construction firms to integrate heat mitigation in their building plan and designs through green building certification programs.

The provision of subsidies for green buildings is also an option.

Green corridors

One of the solutions to surging temperatures is city-wide network of cooling islands- including parks and pools- linked by cool walkways as showed by Paris in France and Medellin in Colombia. In Colombia, more than 10,000 trees have been planted along its 36 green corridors and this resulted to a 2-degree Celsius reduction in surface temperatures.

Government officials must continue to track the results of such experiments to show the best available evidence to green their cities.

As we face a future with longer, hotter dry weather, cities must intensify their planning for extreme heat. If our local disaster risk reduction and management councils have plans for other hazards such as floods, typhoons, fires, or storm surges, all of us should work to incorporate extreme heat into our local emergency plans. There’s no other way to counter it but to be prepared with it.

Share20Tweet13
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Barangay Mandaragat holds weekly coastal cleanup activity

Next Post

Palawan indigenous families receive aid through food-for-work program

Gerardo Reyes Jr

Gerardo Reyes Jr

Related Posts

Strip the money and see who still files candidacy
Column

Due process for the damned

April 15, 2026
Strip the money and see who still files candidacy
Column

Bravisimo, director

April 10, 2026
Strip the money and see who still files candidacy
Column

The dead don’t speak, but the living are not allowed to

April 7, 2026
Strip the money and see who still files candidacy
Column

Squatters in the boy’s club

March 13, 2026
Strip the money and see who still files candidacy
Column

Under construction, under construction

March 5, 2026
Strip the money and see who still files candidacy
Column

The butcher’s bill

February 28, 2026
Next Post
Palawan indigenous families receive aid through food-for-work program

Palawan indigenous families receive aid through food-for-work program

PH-U.S alliance solidifies amid China’s threats in West Philippine Sea

PH considers aerial supply missions for troops in BRP Sierra Madre

Discussion about this post

Latest News

Congress pushes for strengthening energy and supply security

Congress pushes for strengthening energy and supply security

May 18, 2026
City eyes digital payout for allowances

City eyes digital payout for allowances

May 18, 2026
Structure in mangroves area demolished

Structure in mangroves area demolished

May 18, 2026
Seaside Cebu Arena to open this June 2026

Seaside Cebu Arena to open this June 2026

May 15, 2026
PAGASA: El Niño may emerge starting June 2026

PAGASA: El Niño may emerge starting June 2026

May 15, 2026

POPULAR NEWS

  • Igorot hunks plant tree seedlings in Yamang Bukid Farm

    Igorot hunks plant tree seedlings in Yamang Bukid Farm

    15262 shares
    Share 6105 Tweet 3816
  • ‘Rizal is still relevant in a modern society’

    11719 shares
    Share 4688 Tweet 2930
  • Aktres na si Maja Salvador, sa Puerto Princesa inabutan ng quarantine

    10301 shares
    Share 4120 Tweet 2575
  • Everything you need to know about ukay-ukay and its illegality

    10119 shares
    Share 4048 Tweet 2530
  • Palawan ranks 2nd for 2020 Hottest Destination in the world

    9749 shares
    Share 3899 Tweet 2437
ADVERTISEMENT
Palawan Daily News

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. Alpha Eight Publishing

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Advertise
  • Online Radio
  • Opinion
  • Legal Section
  • Lifestyle
  • About the PDN

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest News
    • City
    • Provincial
    • National
    • Regional
  • Advertise
  • Online Radio
  • Opinion
  • Legal Section
  • Lifestyle
  • About the PDN
    • Contact Us
    • Ownership and Funding

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. Alpha Eight Publishing