New podcast series
Based on ongoing work at Karachi Urban Lab, the Rethinking Heat in the City podcast brings the conversation of heat in the city to the wider public.
Eid Mubarak!
***NEW PUBLICATION*** Recipes for Life with Heat during Ramzan: A multilingual collection exploring the gendered relationship between consumption, mobility and piety during the holy month.
SmARTification of everything
Members of our Karachi team presented at the Smartification of Everything Symposium, organized by the University of Ottowa on the 10th of March.
5th Annual CURP Conference, Karachi
Researchers Adam Abdullah, Soha Macktoom, and Aqdas Fatima presented at the 5th International Conference on Urban and Regional Planning in Karachi.
Scorching Cities
What does it mean to make heat a central part of social, cultural, political and economic analysis of the city. Our Karachi team addressed this question in a recent panel, “Scorching Cities.”
Public Health Conference, Islamabad
Researchers Adam Abdullah, Soha Macktoom and Aqdas Fatima presented at the 11th Annual Public Health Conference in Islamabad, Pakistan.
MoU with Deputy Commissioner South, Karachi
The Karachi Urban Lab signed a MoU with the Deputy Commissioner South, Karachi, to strengthen relationship with government representatives.
First responders workshop
The Karachi Urban Lab organized a workshop at IBA City Campus for first responders from different organizations dealing with heatwaves, rains, and other disasters in Karachi.
Heat in urban Asia
Cool Infrastructures team members presented at the workshop Heat in Urban Asia: Past, Present, and Future.
Presentation: Gobeshona Global Conference 2021
On January 23rd 2021, Cool Infrastructures Karachi team member Adam Abdullah presented at a session titled “Climate Adaptive Heat Stress Management in South Asia” hosted jointly by the Integrated Research and Action for Development (IRADe), India, and the Global Heat Health Information Network (GHHIN), and supported by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC).
#ThisisCool Webinar Report: Gender Sensitive Cooling
In March 2021 the Cool Infrastructures team attended a Sustainable Energy for All #ThisisCool Webinar, entitled Cooling for All and Gender: Towards Inclusive, Sustainable Cooling Solutions. Dr Anindrya Nastiti reflects on the gender sensitive cooling policies and strategies outlined during the event.
Presentation: Cool Infrastructures at the Global Dialogue Platform
Elspeth Oppermann presented the initial results of the Covid-Heat Nexus survey at the 8th Global Dialogue platform, in a session put together by the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre and the Global Heat Health Information network.
Updated Open Access Dataset: Covid-Heat Survey Version 2 now available
An updated version of our large scale, multi country dataset on heat and Covid-19 is now available. Since uploading the raw data a few months ago, the team has been hard at work cleaning it up for greater ease of use.
Podcast: Cool Infrastructures on “Can’t Take the Heat”
Elspeth Oppermann talks to “Can’t Take the Heat” about how people living in cities across the Global South deal with the dual impacts of COVID-19 lockdowns and extreme heat.
Large scale, remote survey on the COVID-19 heat nexus completed
As part of our engagement on COVID-19, in August 2020 the Cool Infrastructures project completed a rapid, large scale data collection exercise across four cities in India, Pakistan, Cameroon and Indonesia. The exercise was intended to produce critical information and resources about the nexus of Covid-19 and extreme heat for particularly vulnerable urban populations.
Open data on COVID-19 and Heat-Health published
Open access dataset: Cool Infrastructures has made available a large, multi-country dataset on heat and Covid-19.
Analysis: “Heat and COVID-19 in the Off Grid City”
This 3000 word essay, published on the Medical Humanities Blog, Somatosphere, outlines the paradoxes for governments and urban authorities of managing heat and COVID-19 simultaneously.
Briefing Note: Heat, Covid-19 and Informal Settlements
COVID-19 amplifies the risks of hot weather, and 2020 is on track to be one of the hottest years on record.