Temperature Sensor Pilot

  | KREYÒL AYISYEN

 

What is this thing?

Great question! This is a temperature sensor, which measures the local air temperature and humidity (also referred to as “heat index”). It helps to provide temperature information that can help inform how our city responds to extreme heat. There are 15 sensors like this one, distributed around the city to measure local air temperatures across Boston neighborhoods from June to September 2024.          

Why are you measuring local air temperature?    

This project will help clarify what it would take to establish a citywide temperature sensor network. Sensors have been located in “temperature hotspots'' that are more vulnerable to heat. There are temperature sensors located in the five focus neighborhoods identified in the Heat Plan: Chinatown, Dorchester, East Boston, Mattapan, and Roxbury, as well as Allston-Brighton and Jamaica Plain. Hotspots in these areas can be up to 10-15 degrees warmer than surrounding areas.

Currently, Boston uses temperature readings from the National Weather Service station at Logan Airport to inform the declaration of extreme heat advisories and emergencies. However, temperatures vary across neighborhoods due to many factors including air flow and land cover.  At Logan Airport, temperature readings can be 10-15 degrees cooler due to the cooling effect of coastal breezes. Temperature sensors can help us better understand localized temperatures across communities across Boston and prepare for hotter conditions in temperature hotspots.

Who is involved?

This is a joint project in partnership with the City of Boston’s Environment Department, The Boston Foundation, Boston University School of Public Health researchers, and A Better City. It is one part of ongoing climate resilience work to study air temperature in the summer. The project aims to inform near-term solutions to keep people safe during heat emergencies and promote “heat resilience” or cooler neighborhoods, buildings, and commutes in the long-term.

Will the data be shared?

We will share an analysis of the data and key takeaways in fall 2024. For future summers, we aim to build upon this project to expand a permanent sensor network, with an associated website and publicly available live data dashboard.

Who can I contact for more information or to report a broken sensor?

Any comments or questions can be directed to: bostonheatsensors@gmail.com. You may also see our research team periodically visiting the sensors to download data every 2 weeks (feel free to say hi!).

Building Climate Resiliency

As the climate changes, our infrastructure must evolve as well. Boston must make its infrastructure resilient to climate change hazards like extreme temperature, extreme precipitation, rising seas and coastal storms.

A Better City is working with multiple stakeholders to monitor climate change projections, educate constituents, and provide adaptation tools and resources for decisions and planning around development.

Climate Ready Boston

Climate Ready Boston is a long-term climate preparedness planning process for the Greater Boston region led by the City of Boston in collaboration with the Green Ribbon Commission.

Why It’s Important

As a coastal city, Boston is particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate change: sea level rise, more frequent severe weather events, more severe flooding, and increased urban heat. The commercial real estate (CRE) sector must make use of available tools, technologies and strategies to prepare for the effects of climate change that are already ‘locked in,’ in order to ensure the economic security of Boston’s future.

A Better City’s Role

A Better City is driving action on climate resilience through three avenues:

  1. The Sustainable Buildings Initiative: In addition to encouraging action on energy, waste, water, and transportation, the Sustainable Buildings Initiative also encourages participants to implement resilience measures in their buildings. A Better City keeps participants up to date on the City’s resilience plan, Climate Ready Boston, and provides a Climate Resilience Toolkit to educate participants about possible resilience measures that might be used in their buildings. For more information, click here
  2. The Green Ribbon Commission’s Commercial Real Este Working Group (CREWG): As part of A Better City’s role in supporting the City’s climate goals, the CREWG also focuses on fostering climate resilience in the commercial real estate sector. Examples include participating in the resilient design strategies for Boston’s vulnerable neighborhoods, reviewing and providing comments on the City’s updated resilience guidelines and checklist, and providing input into the Climate Ready Boston governance and financing project. Specific research in 2017 included: Voluntary Resilience Standards, and preliminary research for the City into a resilience audit and retrofit program.

Building Resiliency Toolkit

The Building Resiliency Toolkit provides information on potential structural interventions that can make commercial building more resilient to climate change.

Why It’s Important

Commercial building owners are not always aware of the resources and technologies available to help improve resiliency.

A Better City’s Role

A Better City developed the Toolkit along with the report, Enhancing Resilience in Boston, to provide commercial building owners with information about available technologies and to help perform a preliminary assessment of potential regulatory touch points within the city and state.

Driving Carbon Reductions

Cities and businesses can help combat the threat of climate change by taking steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

A Better City is helping Boston’s commercial real estate and business sectors reduce carbon emissions through both demand-side and supply-side innovations. The goals: to reduce Boston’s carbon emissions to 25% below 1990 levels by 2020, and to be carbon neutral by 2050.

Why It’s Important

With approximately 50% of Boston’s GHG emissions coming from large buildings and institutions, including numerous commercial buildings, it is clear that the commercial real estate (CRE) sector must be a driving force in meeting these goals. Because of the scale of the commercial building sector, innovations in the way buildings consume and produce energy have an outsized effect on the region’s carbon emissions.

A Better City’s Role

A Better City is driving action on emissions reduction through two avenues:

1. The Sustainable Buildings Initiative: The Sustainable Buildings Initiative engages a core group of representatives from member companies to drive action on topics related to sustainability and climate resilience in commercial real estate. The group convenes quarterly to hear from experts about innovative developments in energy efficiency, renewable energy, waste, water and mobile source emissions. A Better City also keeps participants up to date on current incentives and programmatic updates from the utilities, State, City and other partners. In addition, the Initiative provides resources like the Emissions Reduction Toolkit to help educate property managers and owners about the tools available to reduce Scope 1 and 2 emissions from their buildings. For more information, see https://sustainablebuildingsinitiative.org.

2. The Green Ribbon Commission’s Commercial Real Este Working Group (CREWG): A Better City facilitates the Boston Green Ribbon Commission’s Commercial Real Estate Working Group to support the City’s climate goals by focusing on high-level policy, advocacy, communication and participation, supported by pertinent research, pilot projects, and demonstration models. Carbon reduction examples include engaging with the Energy Efficiency Advisory Council and program administrators to expand efficiency program savings, and engaging the commercial sector on energy efficiency and renewable energy topics. Specific research in 2017 included: Sustainable Tenant Fit-Out and Improvement Guide; and The Commercial Net Zero Energy Building Market in Boston Two events were co-hosted with the Sustainable Buildings Initiative to launch these publications: a Landlord-Tenant Forum to increase communication between landlords and tenants; and a panel discussion, A Path to Zero? The Role of Net Zero Energy Buildings in Boston focused on achieving net zero energy in Boston's commercial 

Policy Work

A Better City's Role

ABC is actively engaged in both city and state-level policy when it comes to climate and energy policy. In state house hearings, coalition meetings, and meetings with city officials, many stakeholders are calling for more involvement of business stakeholders in climate and energy policy. Particularly when it comes to meeting our emissions reductions commitments and scaling up investment in clean energy infrastructure, engaging the private sector will be vital in helping Massachusetts to continue to be seen as a climate leader. ABC is advocating on behalf of the Greater Boston business community for climate and energy policy that is equitable across all sectors, can be applied regionally, and that works across both mitigation and adaptation.

Whether discussing building energy performance or how to make our critical infrastructure resilient to climate change, our members have shown true leadership and commitment to climate and energy policies in Massachusetts. In the last year, ABC has participated in multiple state house hearings to provide testimony on climate and energy bills, we have updated our policy agenda to officially support a transition to net zero emissions economy-wide by 2050, and we have engaged both city and state government in discussions around how to pragmatically achieve our emissions reductions targets. ABC looks forward to continuing to engage in climate policy, on topics like interim emissions reductions targets, sector-specific targets, best practices for carbon offsets, climate finance, and more.

Partnerships 

ABC is a member of various policy coalitions. In house, ABC hosts the buildings policy coalition, in which representatives from large buildings across sectors in the Boston area discuss advocacy principles and engagement strategies around policy relevant to large buildings. In addition, ABC participates in multiple climate and clean energy policy coalitions in an effort to introduce more business perspectives into climate policy discussions. These coalitions include:

*denotes a policy group that is hosted in house by A Better City’s Energy and Environment Unit

Through our participation in policy coalitions that span across sectors and include a diversity of voices from the advocates to the business and private sector space, ABC is able to influence broader coalition narratives and principles. We look forward to working with our colleagues and partners across sectors and ideologies in order to move comprehensive, regional climate policy forward in Massachusetts.

Research

PUBLICATIONS

In addition to policy work and working with our members on energy efficiency and resiliency measures in large buildings, the Energy and Environment unit also performs research relevant to climate, energy, and resilience concerns for the buildings sector in particular. Please find below some of our research published in the last five years, which may also be found on our website’s publications page:

THERMAL ELECTRIFICATION OF LARGE BUILDINGS IN THE COMMONWEALTH

AN OVERVIEW OF ENERGY STORAGE OPPORTUNITIES FOR MASSACHUSETTS COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS 

VOLUNTARY RESILIENCE STANDARDS: AN ASSESSMENT OF MARKET OPTIONS FOR BOSTON’S LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS

THE COMMERCIAL NET ZERO ENERGY BUILDING MARKET IN BOSTON

INNOVATION THROUGH AGGREGATION

SUSTAINABLE TENANT FIT-OUT AND IMPROVEMENT GUIDE

ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE

STATE OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT: GREATER BOSTON INFRASTRUCTURE

ENHANCING RESILIENCE IN BOSTON: A GUIDE FOR LARGE BUILDINGS AND INSTITUTIONS

 

BLOGS

S.9 CLIMATE BILL PASSED | STATEMENT

 

CLIMATE POLICY ALERT: UPDATE ON THE FINAL MA CLIMATE BILL

 

A BETTER CITY HELPS TO SHAPE THE COMMONWEALTH’S TRANSPORTATION AND BUILDINGS SECTOR EMISSIONS REDUCTION STRATEGIES

 

BUILDING EMISSIONS PERFORMANCE STANDARD – COMMERCIAL TENANT FOCUS GROUP

 

ENERGY EFFICIENCY PRIORITIES IN THE NEXT THREE-YEAR ENERGY EFFICIENCY PLAN

 

THE HOMESTRETCH TO THE GOVERNOR’S DESK: AN UPDATE ON MASSACHUSETTS CLIMATE POLICY

 

BERDO ENERGY ASSESSMENT COMPLIANCE FINDINGS - SEPTEMBER 2020

 

BUILD BACK BETTER OR BUST: WHY 2020 MUST BE A YEAR OF BOLD CLIMATE ACTION

 

MASSDEP’S DRAFT 2020-2030 SOLID WASTE MASTER PLAN: RE-OPENING THE PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD


BERDO ENERGY ASSESSMENT COMPLIANCE FINDINGS


POLICY PRINCIPLES TO GET BUILDINGS TO NET ZERO CARBON


EXPANDING BOSTON’S CAPACITY TO BUILD COASTAL RESILIENCE INFRASTRUCTURE: LESSONS FROM THE SEAPORT DISTRICT


UPDATE: BAKER ADMINISTRATION’S NET ZERO BY 2050 LETTER OF DETERMINATION


ADVANCING CLIMATE POLICY AMID THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC


TESTIMONY | GREENWORKS BILL

Technical Assistance

A Better City strives to provide technical assistance and resources to its membership, through the publication of technical guidance around the sustainable use of large buildings, a climate resilience toolkit for buildings, and more. Many of the resources created thus far have been done in partnership with the Sustainable Buildings Initiative (SBI). Please see below some of the offerings that ABC has to share when it comes to technical assistance: