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Painting roofs white could cool cities

WASHINGTON: Painting all the world's city rooftops white could significantly cool urban areas and perhaps ease the impact of global warming, according to a climate study released on Thursday.

Considered a fanciful notion by some critics, the white-roof idea was championed last year by U.S. Energy Secretary Stephen Chu, a Nobel Physics laureate, and research by scientists at the U.S. National Center for Climate Research indicates it has possibilities.

"Our research demonstrates that white roofs, at least in theory, can be an effective method for reducing urban heat," Keith Oleson, the study's lead author said in a statement. "It remains to be seen if it's actually feasible for cities to paint their roofs white, but the idea certainly warrants further investigation."

Climate change hits cities harder than rural areas because many urban surfaces, including dark-colored asphalt roads and tar-covered roofs, absorb heat from the sun. This creates so-called "heat islands" where temperatures can be 2-5 degrees F (about 1-3 degrees C) higher than in the countryside.

White roofs and lighter-colored roads would reflect this heat instead of absorbing it.

Researchers used a computer model to simulate how much solar radiation urban surfaces absorb, and figured that if all the roofs in cities around the globe were painted entirely white, the "heat island" effect could be cut by 33 percent.

That would cool the world's cities by an average of about 0.7 degrees F (about .4 degrees C), with the cooling effect most pronounced on summer days. And the white roofs would also keep the interiors of the buildings cooler.

In the real world, it would be difficult for any roof to be painted completely white, because of heating and cooling vents and other openings.

There wasn't enough detail in the model to figure how much white roofs would cool individual cities, but there was enough to show temperature change in big metropolitan areas.

In the New York area, white roofs would cool summer afternoons by almost 2 degrees F (about 1 degree C).

The study is expected to be published this winter in Geophysical Research Letters.

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