{"id":5494,"date":"2010-10-18T18:02:22","date_gmt":"2010-10-18T18:02:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.gardenvisit.com\/blog\/?p=5494"},"modified":"2010-10-18T18:02:22","modified_gmt":"2010-10-18T18:02:22","slug":"what-can-landscape-and-urban-designers-to-to-limit-climate-change-and-global-warming","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.gardenvisit.com\/blog\/what-can-landscape-and-urban-designers-to-to-limit-climate-change-and-global-warming\/","title":{"rendered":"What can landscape and urban designers to to limit climate change and global warming?"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"\"<\/a>

Alma Grove is a survivor of the Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey street beautification policies of the 1920s and 1930s. Then such street beautification was seen as part of public health provision, along with backgardens for tuberculosis sufferers, window box competitions, public parks and gardens, municipal bakeries (to combat adulteration of flour) and medical provision under the mayorality of Dr Alfred Salter<\/p><\/div>\n

Wikipedia has good entries on Global Warming<\/a> and \u00a0the Greenhouse Effect<\/a>. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change<\/a> summarizes the arguments, details the scientific data and provides a Summary for Policy Makers<\/a>. The IPCC was\u00a0established by the United Nations Environment Programme<\/a> (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization<\/a> (WMO). \u00a0 The greenhouse effect is fundamental to climate change theory. It is the process by which radiation (light and heat) reflected by the surface of the earth is absorbed by atmospheric gases. Greenhouse gases include water vapour and carbon dioxide. They transfer this reflected radiation to other components of the atmosphere and it is re-radiated in all directions, including back down towards the surface. This transfers energy to the surface, so the temperature there is higher than it would be if direct heating by solar radiation were the only warming mechanism. \u00a0Nicholas Stern made an authoritative review of the economic arguments for dealing with global warming in 2006:\u00a0The Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change<\/a><\/em> and concluded that the benefits of\u00a0strong, early action on climate change considerably outweigh the costs, so that 1% of global gross domestic product<\/a> (GDP) per annum<\/em> should be invested to avoid the worst effects of climate change. Otherwise we risk global GDP falling by 20%.<\/p>\n

<\/span><\/h1>\n

So what does this mean for urban designers and landscape architects? Here is an unranked list:<\/p>\n