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CLIMATE CRISIS

Which German cities are best prepared for extreme heat?

Are Germany's cities ready for climate change? According to a nationwide ‘heat check’, there is a lot of work to be done. But some cities are faring better than others in their preparation for rising temperatures.

A jogger in Hamburg.
A jogger in Hamburg. How prepared are German cities for rising heat? Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Marcus Brandt

Are Germany’s cities adequately protecting their residents from the heat-related consequences of climate change?

No – at least that’s what the first ‘heat check’ by Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) suggests. According to the evaluation, only 84 out of 190 cities analysed passed the check and received a ‘green card’. In contrast, 82 municipalities were given a ‘yellow card’ and 24 cities even received a ‘red card’.

For the ‘heat check’, a Potsdam planning office was commissioned by DUH to analyse German cities with more than 50,000 inhabitants. It looked at the ratio of sealed surfaces to green spaces – in other words: how much is a city covered in concrete? And how many trees and green spaces does it have?

The more sealed surfaces there are, the more likely it is that heat will build up, whereas green spaces provide cooling.

READ ALSO: Older Germans ‘more knowledgable’ about climate change than younger people

According to the DUH’s analysis, the following cities are Germany’s top heat protection ‘role models’:

  • Detmold (North Rhine-Westphalia or NRW)
  • Ratingen (NRW)
  • Potsdam (Brandenburg)
  • Jena (Thuringia)

Other cities to get the ‘green light’ are Tübingen, Berlin, Bonn, Hamburg, Dortmund and Leipzig. According to the study, these places have a high volume of greenery and a lower degree of sealing.

The ratio is reversed for the following cities, which score poorly in the ranking:

  • Ludwigshafen (Rhineland-Palatinate)
  • Heilbronn (Baden-Württemberg)
  • Regensburg (Bavaria)
  • Worms (Rhineland-Palatinate)
  • Mainz (Rhineland-Palatinate)
  • Ludwigsburg (Baden-Württemberg)
  • Ingolstadt (Bavaria)

Frankfurt am Main also received a ‘red light’ as did Nuremberg and Augsburg.

Then there are special cases such as Sindelfingen (Baden-Württemberg) and Kaiserslautern (Rhineland-Palatinate), which are heavily sealed but at the same time have many green spaces – they receive the ‘yellow card’. Meanwhile, Pulheim (North Rhine-Westphalia) and Wilhelmshaven (Lower Saxony) have hardly any green spaces, but are only slightly sealed – which lands them in this category. 

‘Heat hellscapes’

Experts say that more heat protection planning is needed in cities. 

“The continuing trend towards more concrete and less greenery is alarming,” said Barbara Metz, Federal Managing Director of Umwelthilfe. “Instead of becoming liveable places for recreation, our cities are turning into heat hellscapes.”

Frankfurt am Main

Frankfurt am Main is on the ‘red list’ in the study on heat protection. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Helmut Fricke

Currently, more than 50 hectares of land are sealed every day in Germany, which ultimately poses a ‘health risk’, Metz said.

Local authorities and social organisations are calling for more financial support from the government for heat protection.

The Vice President of the Association of German Cities, Katja Dörner, told the Rheinische Post newspaper that although many municipalities already have heat action plans, they remain meaningless “if we cannot implement the planned measures because the municipalities lack the money”.

The Federal Climate Adaptation Act, which has been in force since July 1st, can be used to implement heat protection measures, said Dörner. 

Many local authorities and districts are already addressing the issue, said Verena Bentele, President of the VDK social welfare organisation. But she said there is a clear lack of financial support. For instance, old people’s homes, kindergartens, schools and hospitals in particular need to be equipped with air conditioning systems.

Sabine Bösing, Managing Director of the Federal Working Group for Assistance to the Homeless, called for a heat protection fund so that emergency housing assistance services and facilities could purchase things like sun cream and drinking water. 

What is the government doing?

Federal Building Minister Klara Geywitz has said the issue is a top priority – and she wants to better protect residents and nature in cities from the heat.

Climate change is clearly noticeable here in the summer months, said the SPD politician this week. “People living in the city suffer from tropical nights and sweltering daytime temperatures in record-breaking summer,” she added. Geywitz said this is a major health risk, especially for older people and small children.

The Federal Ministry of Construction has drawn up a strategy that is intended to provide urban planners and civil engineers with a number of options. It recommends, for example, more parks, street trees and green roofs that provide cooling. To prevent plants from drying out during long periods of drought, areas should be created where rain can seep away.

Awnings could help to make playgrounds usable in summer, while homeless people need more access to drinking water fountains and cool retreats, she said. 

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CLIMATE CRISIS

Germany’s parks plant a way forward on climate change

In the castle gardens of Muskauer Park, which straddles both banks of the German-Polish river border, caretakers have mounted a fightback against the impacts of climate change.

Germany's parks plant a way forward on climate change

On the stump of a 150-year-old oak tree, gnawed by parasites and felled in a storm, a tender new shoot represents the estate’s hope of adapting to rising temperatures and more frequent droughts.

As part of a “natural regeneration” project, the sapling was grafted onto its fallen predecessor by gardeners in the first step towards replacing the UNESCO-listed park’s lost trees.

The young oak “will benefit from the roots of the old tree and will be more resistant to threats”, gardener Jana Kretschmer told AFP.

By transmitting their DNA to the new saplings, the older trees “teach” their descendants how to adapt to less hospitable conditions.

“Nature shows the way, humans need only look on,” said Kretschmer.

Drought and pests are among the silent killers encouraged by climate change, which weakens plants and has started to decimate the flora of the parklands on both sides of the Neisse river.

Some 180 beeches, ashes and oaks had to be felled there last year.

“Every year since 2018 we have to cut down more and more trees,” said Kretschmer, the site’s deputy manager, who bemoaned the loss of countless old trees as a “catastrophe”.

Natural cure

In June, 15 German estates presented their plans to protect their gardens against the impacts of climate change.

At Muskauer Park, the groundskeepers are betting on the traditional method of natural regeneration to increase the tree-count.

Importing more resistant species of trees would be an option, but one that would be “neither sustainable, nor intelligent”, said park manager Cord Panning.

A natural regeneration approach moreover promises savings in two scarce commodities: money and water.

Following the method, caretakers select the best young specimens to plant them in place of old trees, eschewing genetic engineering or any foreign transplants.

In time, they hope to restore virtually all of the trees in the 19th century garden that have been lost and felled.

Among the pests to have plagued the trees at Muskauer Park are the tinder fungus and the bark beetle.

“Usually, by the time you realise it, it is too late,” said Kretschmer.

Long dry spells between 2018 and 2020 did nothing to help the situation, leaving the trees ever more vulnerable to attack.

Fungal invasion

Further south in Germany, at Nymphenburg Palace in Munich, the spread of the phytophthora fungus and invasive mistletoe species are depriving trees of water.

“The trees are experiencing dry stress, even in years where rainfall is sufficient,” said Michael Degle, the palace’s landscape architect.

The Munich park has had a system of “sustainable tree management” since 2018, which employs moisture sensors and new pruning techniques.

The project feeds into the joint efforts of over a dozen garden estates in Germany, including Muskauer Park, to develop effective responses to climate change.

But their work is “reaching its limits”, according to the group’s June report.

Already, 20 to 30 percent of their budget is spent on fixing climate damage — a share which is only increasing.

According to their calculations, somewhere between 200 and 250 million euros ($220 and 275 million) would be needed in the long term to protect historic parks from rising temperatures.

The damage to trees at Muskauer Park by a warming climate will be on show at the estate’s open day at the end of September.

An opportunity, according to Kretschmer, to show that trees “are not just wood, but living beings much more clever than us”.

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