How Polluted Is Your City?

By - 410 words

Language

Reading Level

Listen to Article

We all know that global warming is caused by greenhouse gases, largely carbon dioxide, that is emitted by everything ranging from home appliances and SUV's to the heating and lighting systems of office buildings. But since we don't see the gas, most of us simply shake our heads in dismay and then continue on with our bad habits. Now, researchers at Arizona State University are trying to change that.

Spearheaded by associate professor Kevin Gurney, The Hestia Project's main goal is to make something that is currently intangible into something a little more tangible, by allowing all of us to visually see how much each and everyone of us is 'contributing' to global warming.

In order to obtain a complete picture of the city's environment, the team begins by compiling data from multiple sources, ranging from property filings to EPA and even DMV records. Then, using special software they lump the emissions into three categories - commercial entities (office buildings and power and industrial plants), households and vehicles.

This is the stage where things start to get really interesting. That's because instead of showing all this information using boring graphs that we all instantly lose interest in, they create an interactive visual 'film', that depicts not just the carbon emitted by each entity, but also the exact location it is coming from and the also the amount, which varies depending on the time of day or season. So for example, the car emissions during rush hour are the highest as is the case for commercial buildings during the day, especially during winter months when the heating is on.

Kevin knows that some of the data revealed may start a blame game among the residents of the city. However, he is hoping that the people will go beyond that and instead use it to make changes in their daily lives or that city planners will use it to improve energy efficiency by adding insulation programs in buildings that reveal the highest rates of carbon dioxide output.

So far, the team has just tracked the emissions for the city of Indianapolis. They are next planning to do the same for Phoenix and Los Angelesand then hopefully all the other cities, not just in the U.S. but also, across the globe. If each city works on reducing their emissions by just 10%, it could go a long way in reversing global warming, something we all know needs to be done, before it's too late.

Resources: fastcoexist.com, inhabitat.com

Cite Article
Geography
Learn Keywords in this Article
137 Comments
  • King Kang yo yiover 9 years
    good article
    • That guy over 9 years
      Good article
      • iikattastic
        iikattasticover 9 years
        the red bars seem like aliens dat have been attacking dah cities to meh xD its scary o.o
        • iikattastic
          iikattasticover 9 years
          o.o i knew dat already. xD (but though it makes meh like always smarter den evah i guess like im a nerd with out glasses or braces xD)
          • otter
            otterabout 10 years
            Wow. I already knew that, but still, that is pretty scary...
            • lionsrcute1
              lionsrcute1over 10 years
              Wow. by doing all this, we're basically destroying everything, including us. :/ Wow.
              • popoover 10 years
                I'm learning about this in science, and we needed to turn in a current event about it, but it's like actually terrible that we put THIS MUCH carbon dioxide into the air...
                • la_eliza
                  la_elizaabout 11 years
                  wow.....
                  • Ninja over 11 years
                    cool
                    • kool Koover 11 years
                      I loved the video??????????????????????????? uuuuuuuuuuuh, yea