@inproceedings{25733, keywords = {Urban heat island, Heat Island}, author = {Arthur H Rosenfeld and Joseph J Romm and Hashem Akbari and Melvin Pomerantz and Haider Taha}, title = {Policies to reduce heat islands: Magnitudes of benefits and incentives to achieve them}, abstract = {

A "Cool Communities" strategy of lighter-colored reroofs and resurfaced pavements, and shade trees, can directly lower annual air conditioning bills in Los Angeles (LA) by about $100 million (M), cool the air in the LA Basin (thereby saving indirectly $70M more in air conditioning), and reduce smog exceedance by about 10%, worth another $360M, for a total savings of about $0.5 billion per year. Trees are most effective if they shade buildings; but they are still very cost effective if they merely cool the air by evapotranspiration. Avoided peak power for air conditioning can be about 1.5GW (more than 15% of LA air conditioning). Extrapolated to the entire US, the authors estimate 20GW avoided and potential annual electricity savings of about $5–10B in 2015. To achieve these savings, they call for ratings and labels for cool materials, buildings` performance standards, utility incentive programs, and an extension of the existing smog-offset trading market (RECLAIM) to include credit for cool surfaces and trees. EPA can include cool materials and trees in its proposed regional "open market smog-offset trading credits".

}, year = {1996}, journal = {1996 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings}, volume = {9}, edition = {18}, pages = {177-186}, month = {05/1996}, address = {Asilomar Conference Grounds, Pacific Grove, CA}, language = {eng}, }