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Key Statistics

All 25 cities mapped. Where data is unavailable, cells are marked “n/a”. Income/deprivation data is available for 11 cities (France, UK, Germany).


Canopy and heat by city

City Country Buildings Citywide canopy Mean buffer canopy % above 30% Mean Heatwave LST
Sevilla Spain 62,940 4.2% 7.1% 1.3% 51.1°C
Athens Greece 67,825 8.1% 11.3% 3.7% 43.6°C
Marseille France 256,397 7.4% 17.8% 15.8% 43.8°C
Thessaloniki Greece 26,858 7.9% 19.6% 16.4% 43.7°C
Rome Italy 239,207 8.6% 11.8% 7.8% 49.1°C
Porto Portugal 45,274 10.0% 13.5% 6.3% 31.9°C
Lisbon Portugal 58,785 10.5% 10.9% 4.3% 36.9°C
Bristol UK 188,988 10.1% 16.1% 10.5% 36.7°C
Naples Italy 59,034 10.2% 18.0% 14.9% 47.7°C
Lyon France 46,246 10.3% 22.6% 24.9% 40.8°C
Toulouse France 137,966 10.7% 16.9% 9.4% 44.1°C
Birmingham UK 282,088 15.2% 13.5% 7.9% 34.8°C
Barcelona Spain 74,957 12.9% 24.3% 30.7% 42.0°C
Madrid Spain 159,773 12.9% 17.1% 14.3% 46.4°C
Leeds UK 328,493 13.0% 12.9% 8.2% 21.7°C†
Milan Italy 68,631 13.0% 26.3% 35.7% 45.9°C
Newcastle UK 73,969 13.1% 12.2% 5.5% 29.3°C
London UK 1,545,577 14.0% 14.0% 7.2% 44.9°C
Liverpool UK 136,605 15.2% 11.3% 6.5% 32.9°C
Paris France 118,646 16.7% 19.5% 18.0% 29.7°C
Cologne Germany 322,172 18.7% 29.2% 45.7% 34.7°C
Nice France 53,858 20.1% 33.5% 55.7% 42.4°C
Munich Germany 200,191 27.2% 24.1% 27.2% 37.9°C
Hamburg Germany 384,724 27.7% 28.5% 44.4% 32.3°C
Berlin Germany 575,524 43.6% 21.0% 50.9% 43.8°C

Citywide canopy = total canopy area ÷ city boundary area. Mean buffer canopy = average canopy % within 60m of each building — a measure of how much useful, local shade each building actually has. % above 30% = proportion of buildings meeting the 30% canopy cooling threshold.

The gap between citywide and buffer canopy is telling: a city can have high overall tree cover (parks, forests, peri-urban green) while most buildings still lack adequate nearby shade. Berlin illustrates this starkly — 43.6% citywide canopy, but only 21.0% around the average building.

UK cities use May 2026 data; most continental cities use summer 2024 heatwave data. Berlin uses a July 2025 composite; Sevilla uses a July 2023 heatwave composite; Hamburg uses a 2023–2024 summer median composite. See Methods for scene details.

† Leeds LST from a partially cloudy scene (14.4% cloud, 2024-07-30), so mean temperature is not representative of peak heat.

Total: ~5.1 million buildings across 25 cities. On average, 83.5% of buildings fall below the 30% canopy threshold — even in cities with substantial overall tree cover.


Income-heat inequality (cities with equity data)

City Country Equity data source Canopy–heat ρ Income–heat ρ Key finding
Nice France Filosofi 200m (2019) −0.81 −0.54 Strongest canopy–heat signal. Wealthy hillsides have canopy; coastal flats exposed
Bristol UK IMD 2025 (LSOA) −0.64 +0.10 Strong canopy–heat link; deprivation–heat link weak
Toulouse France Filosofi 200m (2019) −0.58 −0.32
Munich Germany Zensus 2022 (100m) −0.57 +0.07 Rent barely predicts heat; canopy strongly does
London UK IMD 2025 (LSOA) −0.55 +0.33 Most deprived LSOAs significantly hotter
Lyon France Filosofi 200m (2019) −0.51 −0.41
Marseille France Filosofi 200m (2019) −0.51 −0.55 Strongest income–heat link
Cologne Germany Zensus 2022 (100m) −0.51 +0.09
Berlin Germany Zensus 2022 (100m) −0.46 −0.09 Rent barely predicts heat; canopy does
Birmingham UK IMD 2025 (LSOA) −0.45 +0.23
Paris France Filosofi 200m (2019) −0.29 −0.16 Weakest signal: both rich and poor equally canopy-deprived

Canopy–heat ρ: Spearman correlation between canopy % and surface temperature. Negative = more canopy → cooler (expected). Income–heat ρ: correlation between income/deprivation proxy and surface temperature. Negative (France) = lower income → hotter; positive (UK) = higher deprivation rank → hotter. Same relationship, different measurement direction.

No equity data available for: Spain (Barcelona, Madrid, Sevilla), Italy (Rome, Naples, Milan), Portugal (Lisbon, Porto), Greece (Athens, Thessaloniki), UK (Leeds, Liverpool, Newcastle).


Cool spots: dense areas that stay cool

Temperature gaps between shaded and exposed areas at similar dwelling densities (~50 dw/ha):

City Temperature gap Mean canopy in cool spots
Berlin 7.5°C ≥20%
Paris 9.8°C ≥20%
Birmingham 6.6°C ≥20%
London 5.2°C ≥20%
Lyon 5.2°C ≥20%
Marseille 4.8°C ≥20%

Cool spot criteria: mean canopy ≥20% within 60m, surface temperature below city 25th percentile, dwelling density ≥8 dw/ha.


Data sources

  • Tree canopy: Google EIE (0.2m, 2020–2024) for 8 cities; Meta/WRI Global Canopy Height (1m, 2020) for all others. All vegetation counted (no height filter). Canopy assessed within 60m of each building. Hybrid fill applied where 0.2m coverage is incomplete.
  • Surface temperature: Landsat 8/9 Collection 2 Level 2 (30m). Summer 2024 for most continental cities; May 2026 for UK; composites for Berlin, Sevilla, Hamburg.
  • Buildings: IGN BD TOPO v3.x (France), Overture Maps (all other countries).
  • Income: INSEE Filosofi 200m grid (France, 2019).
  • Deprivation: IMD 2025 at LSOA level (UK). Zensus 2022 at 100m grid (Germany, rent as proxy).
  • Threshold: 30% canopy cover within 60m, the minimum linked to measurable cooling (Ziter et al. 2019).
 

RMIT Centre for Urban Research
Unpublished analysis by Dr Thami Croeser, June 2026