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Study: trees have major cooling effect even in extreme heat

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
June 24, 2025
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 21 mins read
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Study: trees have major cooling effect even in extreme heat
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Trees cool cities better than previously assumed

Even in extreme heat above 39°C, plane trees continue to evaporate large amounts of water, thereby cooling their surroundings, the Swiss study published on Monday found.


Keystone-SDA





Generated with artificial intelligence.

Plane trees in cities have an important cooling effect even in extreme heat, according to a new study by the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL). This challenges earlier assumptions that the cooling effect of trees reaches its limits at 30-35° degrees Celsius.


This content was published on


June 23, 2025 – 10:49

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Even in extreme heat above 39°C, plane trees continue to evaporate large amounts of water, thereby cooling their surroundings, the study published on Monday found.

This is good news for urban areas. Days with temperatures above 30°C are becoming more frequent. The next important step is to find out how effectively other tree species transpire in extreme heat.

Trees in cities cool their surroundings by evaporating water through their leaves. This process works like sweating: evaporation draws heat from the environment, causing the air temperature to drop.

If leaf temperatures rise above 30-35°C photosynthesis no longer works – the leaf pores close to prevent water loss.

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a man lying next to a fountain In the city of Bucharest, Romania, temperatures reached 42 °C this summer. The cisy was hit by a heatwave

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Climate solution for the future: How to keep cities cool during heatwaves?




This content was published on


Aug 29, 2024



How can hot summers be made more tolerable for city-dwellers? SWI swissinfo.ch asked an expert at the federal technology institute ETH Zurich.



Read more: Climate solution for the future: How to keep cities cool during heatwaves?


‘Not yet fully understood’

In the summer of 2023, the research team from WSL and the Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) measured how plane trees behave under heat stress. The measurements on eight trees in the Geneva suburb of Lancy showed that the water flow in the tree trunks did not decrease even when it was very hot – on the contrary, evaporation actually increased as temperatures rose.

+ When a tree is worth more than air-conditioning

“Obviously, we have not yet fully understood how trees react to extreme conditions,” said study leader Christoph Bachofen. The researchers suspect that, among other things, deep-lying water reserves in the soil helped the plane trees.

The actual cooling effect of urban trees during heatwaves could therefore be significantly underestimated by current predictions using conventional models, the researchers said in the study, which was published in the journal Urban Forestry & Urban Greening.

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trees

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Study: more trees in cities could save lives during heatwaves




This content was published on


Feb 1, 2023



A study of 93 European cities reckons that upping the level of urban tree coverage could save thousands of lives.



Read more: Study: more trees in cities could save lives during heatwaves


Translated from German with DeepL/sb

We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools to translate them into English. A journalist then reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication.  

Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.

If you have any questions about how we work, write to us at english@swissinfo.ch.

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