Experts say ambitious project could offer relief from city’s humid weather
By Colleen Barry
If Italy‘s fashion capital has a predominant colour, it is grey – not only because of the blocks of neoclassical stone buildings for which the city is celebrated, but also due to its often-grey sky, which traps pollution.
But Milan now wants to shift its colour palette towards green.
The city has ambitious plans to plant 3 million new trees by 2030 – a move experts say could offer relief from the city’s muggy, sometimes tropical weather.
Some ad-hoc projects have already contributed to environmental improvements. Architect Stefano Boeri’s striking Vertical Forest residential towers, completed in 2014 near the Garibaldi train station, aims to improve not only air quality but the quality of life for Milan residents.
Mr Boeri created a small island of greenery in the heart of Milan, his pair of high-rises brimming from every balcony with shrubs and trees that absorb carbon dioxide and PM10 particles, a pollutant with links to respiratory ailments and cancer.
“I think the theme of forestation is one of the big challenges that we have today. It is one of the most effective ways we have to fight climate change, because it is like fighting the enemy on its own field,” Mr Boeri said. “It is effective and it is also democratic, because everyone can plant trees.”
The UN climate summit taking place now in Poland has urged cities and regions to help achieve the goals of the 2015 Paris agreement on curbing global warming, which include limiting the increase in the planet’s temperature to 2C (3.6F) this century.
Also, the World Economic Forum‘s global agenda council has put extending the tree canopy among its top urban initiatives, recognising that small-scale changes can have a major impact on urban areas, including helping to lower city temperatures, creating more comfortable microclimates and mitigating air pollution.
Milan officials estimate the program to boost the number of trees by 30 per cent in the broader metropolitan area will absorb an additional 5 million tons of carbon dioxide a year – four-fifths of the total produced by Milan – and reduce harmful PM10 small particulates by 3,000 tons over a decade. Significantly, it would also reduce temperatures in the city by 2C, they say.
Mr Boeri said the current green canopy of the Lombardy region’s capital is just 7 per cent of the urban area. That is well below northern European cities like Germany’s Frankfurt at 21.5 per cent or Amsterdam at nearly 21 per cent. It is closer to Paris at nearly 9 per cent, according to the World Economic Forum’s Green View Index – and the French capital itself has been battling for years to fight rising air pollution.
By 2030, Milan hopes to increase that green canopy number to between 17 and 20 per cent.
Damiano Di Simine, the scientific coordinator in Lombardy for the environmental group Legambiente, said potentially the biggest impact of the green Milan project will be to lower temperatures in a city where the night-time temperature can be 6C (10.8F) higher than in the surrounding area. City statistics show Milan endures 35 tropical nights a year.
Because the city lies close to the Alps, Milan gets very little wind to clear the pollutants that become blocked in by temperature inversions, where a layer of cool air is trapped by a layer of warmer air.
”The lack of wind also accentuates the urban heating,” Mr Di Simine said. ”It means the discomfort from thermic inversions is terrible, because the climate is very stationary. Planting trees will help this.”