Highlights
- Extreme urban heat is one of the deadliest and most costly urban risks, threatening jobs, infrastructure, and health, especially in cities of the Global South.
- By 2050, the number of urban poor exposed to dangerous heat could rise by 700%, with the greatest impacts expected in Africa and Asia.
- This Handbook provides practical guidance for city leaders to move from reactive measures to long-term resilience, safeguarding lives and economies from extreme urban heat.
Extreme urban heat is one of the biggest challenges facing cities today, especially in the Global South, where rapid urbanization and limited resources make adaptation harder. Rising temperatures disrupt work, schooling, and access to health services. Heat also drives up energy demand for cooling, straining energy systems and increasing emissions. Urban heat islands make cities even hotter—sometimes by up to 10°C—threatening lives, productivity, and economic stability.
The costs of inaction are severe. Heatwaves will become frequent and intense, with deadly impacts on vulnerable groups such as outdoor workers, the elderly, and low-income families. By 2050, the number of urban poor exposed to extreme heat could rise by 700%, with the largest impacts in West Africa and Southeast Asia. Without proactive measures, cities risk worsening inequality, economic losses, and migration pressures. Expanding equitable access to sustainable cooling is essential to protect communities and economies.
The Handbook on Urban Heat Management in the Global South helps cities take action. Developed by the World Bank with contributions from the United Nations Human Settlement Programme (UN-Habitat) and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the Handbook offers practical guidance to assess heat risk, plan resilience strategies, and implement solutions such as green infrastructure, passive cooling, and sustainable cooling systems. Organized in three volumes—a policymaker summary, a technical manual, and a solutions catalog—it equips cities to move from reactive responses to long-term strategies that safeguard health, jobs, and quality of life in a warming world.