Existing procedures for the assessment of the
thermal environment in the fields of public weather services,
public health systems, precautionary planning, urban design,
tourism and recreation and climate impact research exhibit
significant shortcomings. This is most evident for simple
(mostly two-parameter) indices, when comparing them to
complete heat budget models developed since the 1960s.
ISB Commission 6 took up the idea of developing a Universal
Thermal Climate Index (UTCI) based on the most advanced
multi-node model of thermoregulation representing progress
in science within the last three to four decades, both in thermophysiological
and heat exchange theory. Creating the essential
research synergies for the development of UTCI required
pooling the resources of multidisciplinary experts in the fields
of thermal physiology, mathematical modelling, occupational
medicine, meteorological data handling (in particular radiation
modelling) and application development in a network. It
was possible to extend the expertise of ISB Commission 6
substantially by COST (a European programme promoting
Cooperation in Science and Technology) Action 730 so that
finally over 45 scientists from 23 countries (Australia,
Canada, Israel, several Europe countries, New Zealand, and
the United States) worked together. The work was performed
under the umbrella of theWMO Commission on Climatology
(CCl). After extensive evaluations, Fiala’s multi-node human
physiology and thermal comfort model (FPC) was adopted for
this study. The model was validated extensively, applying as
yet unused data from other research groups, and extended for
the purposes of the project. This model was coupled with a
state-of-the-art clothing model taking into consideration
behavioural adaptation of clothing insulation by the general
urban population in response to actual environmental temperature.
UTCI was then derived conceptually as an equivalent
temperature (ET). Thus, for any combination of air temperature,
wind, radiation, and humidity (stress), UTCI is defined as
the isothermal air temperature of the reference condition that
would elicit the same dynamic response (strain) of the physiological
model. As UTCI is based on contemporary science
its use will standardise applications in the major fields of
human biometeorology, thus making research results comparable
and physiologically relevant.
History
School
Design
Citation
JENDRITZKY, G., DE DEAR, R. and HAVENITH, G., 2012. UTCI - why another thermal index? International Journal of Biometeorology, 56 (3), pp. 421 - 428