URBESGG - Urban Heat Islands
The phenomenon known as Urban Heat Islands (UHIs) has become a serious problem for cities: their Environment, Society, and Governance (ESG). They are easy to observe and explain after their consolidation, but difficult to predict or identify during formation due to their multidisciplinary nature that exceeds human observation capacity, and even more complex to be reversed as they require large interventions and investments.
According to Nature Climate Change, Urban Heat Islands (UHIs) are characterized by urban regions with higher average temperatures than adjacent areas, having distinct causes that affect all cities and citizens of the planet to a greater or lesser extent, but mainly regions with higher economic activity and population density. According to the United Nations, 54% of the world's population already lives in urban areas, with a projection to reach 68% by 2050. 59 countries with more than 10 million inhabitants already have more than 80% of their urban population, requiring improvement that combines sustainability, quality of life, economic development, and environment (ESG).
According to the University of Southern California, in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives (2018), there was a correlation between temperature and higher crime rates in several neighborhoods. A study published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology (2017) by the University of Illinois correlated ambient temperature with health, finding that about 6% of deaths from respiratory and cardiac diseases in a city were directly linked to excessive heat
In economics, studies conducted in Baltimore, Lisbon, and Sydney have shown that the average temperature of a region is inversely related to property values and appreciation. Similarly, publications in Landscape and Urban Planning (2017), Urban Forestry & Urban Greening (2018), and Energy and Buildings (2020) indicate that regions with higher temperatures tend to attract less investment and employment opportunities, contributing to increased poverty and local degradation. This information is supported by observations in Buenos Aires, where for every 1°C increase in temperature in a municipal region, the number of companies decreases by 1.2%, the number of jobs is reduced by 0.8%, and per capita GDP in the area decreases by an average of 0.6%.
This convergence points to average losses between 1.4% and 1.7% of municipalities' annual GDP by 2050, which is more impactful and pernicious in emerging and poor societies, as it causes a recurring scenario of degradation combined with resource consumption. To reduce thermal discomfort and cool the indoor environment, the annual energy cost per capita is estimated at $25, without considering that this compensation (internal/external heat exchange) consumes economic and energy resources and worsens the external scenario
Corroborating with this international perspective, a study published in Energy and Buildings on Barcelona analyzed the relationship between outdoor temperature and energy consumption in commercial buildings, finding that for every 1°C increase in outdoor temperature, energy consumption for cooling increased on average by 4.7%. In Belo Horizonte, Brazil, it was observed that areas with temperatures above 32°C have an average impact on household budgets that is 35% greater than in areas with temperatures below 24°C.
It consists of an unprecedented Digital Twin SaaS platform, created based on Knowledge-Based Urban Development (KBUD) models and Nature-Based Solutions (NBS), to analyze Urban Heat Islands (UHI) using data science: Big Data, Statistics, Machine Learning, and AI. The platform aims to continuously monitor municipal environments by promoting systematic collection of primary data from IoT sensors, thermal and GPS, installed in buses and delivery vehicles, and public and private sources such as the Brazilian Solar Energy Atlas (INPE), Wind Map, Vegetation Coverage Area, economy and population density (IBGE), urban interventions, thermal properties of materials, fixed and mobile heat generators (air conditioning, vehicles, etc.), energy consumption, and other open data systems.
Using the created data frame, the platform automatically cross-references data in complex analyses of the environment, aiming to identify Urban Heat Islands, mapping existing ones or those that have the potential to form through proposed new urban interventions. In this way, the service's Artificial Intelligence can identify and break down the various causes of formation: from the types of materials used and lack of vegetation to occupation and use of the environment, for each climatic zone, making projections on potential socio-economic, environmental, and energy impacts, current or predicted.
These analyses generate reports in online georeferenced dashboards to support decision-making, aimed at public managers, private construction companies, energy distributors, investment banks, academic centers, and other public and private groups, pointing out problems and suggesting actions to reverse or mitigate existing situations, or changes in new urban intervention projects to avoid the formation of new heat zones.
Among the suggestions, proposals for Nature-Based Solutions are prioritized, followed by recombination of elements or replacement of construction materials, aiming to reduce costs and impacts of SDGs 11, 3, 8, 9, 13, 15, and 17.
The proposal meets the needs of public administrations, civil construction companies, building materials industry, energy concessionaires, universities and research centers, promoting entities and financiers of urban development and smart cities, and extends to other sectors of society directly or indirectly affected by the impacts of Urban Heat Islands (UHI).
Currently, public administrations work independently when observing UHIs, often duplicating efforts. This proposal aims to integrate various departments and share multidisciplinary views, extract indicators of impacts on the environment, promote interactions that are currently non-existent or bureaucratic, and create public policies and actions that aim to generate sustainable socio-economic and environmental results, with projections in the areas of health, economy, investments, environment, and others.
It allows for a pre-analysis of the impact of civil works on the urban environment before submitting building projects or other interventions to obtain construction permits, optimizing and automating interactions with municipal public authorities. This way, it observes the contribution of civil works in the formation of UHIs, promoting the preservation of the environment in search of local sustainability by conducting real estate risk analyses and promoting the well-being of society.
In the construction industry, universities, and research laboratories, the platform will provide intelligence analyses as a guide for the development of materials and construction practices to reduce the formation of UHIs, enabling substitution and promotion of sustainable materials to meet the challenges of each ecosystem.
Electric power companies can correlate projections between UHIs and energy consumption, mitigating risks of blackouts and transformer overload due to urban energy demand, promoting the use of nature-based solutions to mitigate their risks, as well as analyzing investment models in distributed cogeneration.
Promoting institutions, investment, and development banks can incorporate new sustainability indicators based on data into their models, accessing impact analyses of interventions in the formation of UHIs and their consequences in other areas, making compensatory adjustments to invested projects.
UHIs are mostly the subject of academic studies segmented as a phenomenon and are underutilized in society, municipal management, or business. At most, it results in punctual high-cost consultations on a specific large-scale environment or work, bringing a superficial picture of that moment about the locality without promoting continuous follow-up, evolution, or consequences of the interventions.
The use of the URBESGG Digital Twins Platform aims to go beyond the model of punctual consultations and studies, providing a deeper analysis of each environment through the integration of various sources and types of data, proprietary, open, and continuously provided in IoT, promoting diagnoses of causes and impact indicators identified. Additionally, it points out potential solutions for each urban scenario and stage of UHI, observing geographical and biome-related issues, ranging from future project adjustments and replacement of construction intervention materials to the introduction of Nature-Based Solutions (NBS)
The team is composed of highly skilled and experienced multidisciplinary professionals in their respective fields, bringing a wide range of complementary specialties capable of understanding the urban, constructional, social, economic, and environmental problems generated by UHIs.
As the team leader and representative to the communities, Estela Bolani has worked closely with public administrations and local organizations, community leaders, academia, and residents to understand the needs and priorities of the communities. She has developed an analytical base supported by feedback and suggestions from local stakeholders to ensure that it meets the needs and desires of various end-user profiles, promoting transparency in the development process and maintaining open and constant communication with stakeholders.
Estela is a business manager, architect, urbanist, and entrepreneur. Master's degree in Human, Intelligent and Sustainable Cities. Researcher at LABCHIS - Laboratory for Human, Intelligent and Sustainable Cities at EGC/UFSC and GENINT - Laboratory for Management and International Business Strategy at UNESC. At SENAI SC, she is currently a teacher capable of transforming citizen's environment and needs analyses into valuable insights for continuous development of the service, in agreement with the Urbesgg team:
Arthur Sanders is a Data Scientist and Innovation Consultant with an MBA in ESG and estudent in AI Postgraduating degree. Researcher at LABCHIS/EGC/UFSC and specializes in cross-referencing, analyzing, and interpreting complex urban data, with international experience in innovation environments like manager in "Project 14Bis" (sports events such as the London Olympics, World Cup, and Rio Olympics, showcasing Brazilian Science, Technology, and Innovation), as well as representing startups and UFSC at WebSummit Lisbon.
Wanderlei Pereira is a researcher, Civil Engineer, and holds a Master's degree in Geotechnics, Structures, and Civil Construction, and a Doctorate in Exact and Technological Sciences. He is a professor at the Department of Civil Engineering and has experience in the areas of Civil Engineering, structure mechanics, and applied mathematics, developing AI for engineering process optimization and model calibration.
Clara Salvador is an architect and urbanist in Urban Development and Licensing area, Public Policies, and SEBRAE consultancy for Territorial Development, Business Strategic Planning. She has participated in programs such as Brasil Mais, Território Vivo and DET, planning and implementing SEBRAEHUB, GOVTECH Innovation, and managing the SEBRAEHUB Incubator. She was part of the Strategic Planning of the ELI Blumenau Innovation Ecosystem and is a Titular Counselor at the Recife Urban Development Council. She has a Master's degree in Urban Development, Bioclimatic and Sustainability, and a specialization in Intelligent Cities. She coordinates the Articulation Movement for SDG SC and is a member of ACATE, ACIF and IAB.
Maria da Graça Agostinho is an architect and urbanist with a Master's degree in Geography, Regional and Urban Development and an Interdisciplinary Doctorate in Human Sciences. She is a professor at the Southern Santa Catarina University and specializes in Urban and Landscape Planning and Design.
Silviane Lopes is an architect and urbanist with a postgraduate degree in Master BIM and Engineering, and student at ISEC in Construction and Rehabilitation Engineering in Portugal.
- Help communities understand and incorporate climate risk in infrastructure design and planning, including through improved data collection and analysis, integration with existing systems, and aligning financial incentives such as insurance.
- Argentina
- Brazil
- Portugal
- Spain
- United States
- Prototype: A venture or organization building and testing its product, service, or business model, but which is not yet serving anyone
The project has been under development for over 2 years, going through the research phase, being selected and refined as a concept and business by the IDEIAZ acceleration program of Anprotec. It has also gone through technological conceptual models, with bench tests based on real climate data and machine learning experiments focused on the topic of Urban Heat Islands.
Following this, it was submitted to the acceleration program of FAPESC - Santa Catarina Research Foundation, and was approved for funding under the Centelha program for innovative entrepreneurship. It has already completed the operational analysis phase and is finalizing the conceptual tests of the first functional version of the technology, with plans to present it at national and international events.
Zero.
In Prototype yet.
Last tests to market.
URBESGG's solution - Urban Heat Islands - is not only a technological innovation, often classified as disruptive, but it also provides an unprecedented observation of Urban Heat Islands (UHIs), identifying how it negatively affects the quality of life, social, economic, and environmental aspects. Through studies by renowned researchers in the available literature that show that temperature is correlated with various elements, we can cite crime rates, cardiovascular disease/diabetes, devaluation of real estate, and lower investment/employment opportunities. The temperature increase also leads to increased energy consumption and negatively impacts sustainability. The UN warns that 54% of the world's population already lives in urban areas and projects 66% in 2050, increasing the challenges of climate change and sustainability. Therefore, the AI-based Digital Twins Saas Platform is directly supporting public or private decision-making, based on Knowledge-Based Urban Development that aims to identify and predict Urban Heat Islands through complex data analysis, building predictive models for the mitigation or reversal of UHIs and treating them through Nature-Based Solutions (NbS).
- Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
- Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Product / Service Distribution (e.g. delivery, logistics, expanding client base)