Helping cities tackle heatwaves and air pollution with AI innovation
Heat and air pollution affect millions in cities. Ƶ researchers use AI and open data to build tools helping cities track risks and respond more effectively to climate and environmental challenges.
Heatwaves are increasingly pushing city temperatures to dangerous levels, whilst air pollution can silently damage our health year-round. Together, these threats affect millions, and they’re often getting worse as our climate changes.
But spotting patterns in where and when these risks are highest isn’t easy. So, a team of researchers at Ƶ led by Dr Zhonghua Zheng, have begun to design tools that help cities track these risks and adapt to growing climate and environmental challenges.
Dr Zheng explains: “We urgently need tools that are not only accurate, but accessible and actionable. This project reflects my passion for using AI and open science to empower decision-makers, from local councils to the global research community.”
By combining open data with a use of AI and detailed computer models, the team are creating more accurate tools that not only track and predict heat and air pollution in cities, but also evaluate the effectiveness of potential engineering solutions – helping leaders take action sooner, make better decisions, and build cleaner, healthier and more resilient urban futures.
Meet the researcher
Dr Zhonghua Zheng is trained as both an Environmental Scientist (PhD) and a Computer Scientist (MS, PhD concentration) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, completing his postdoctoral training at Columbia University and U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR). His research focuses on AI-enabled solutions for urban climate and air quality, combining open data with advanced numerical models of the environment and climate.
Read his papers
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