Chief Heat Officer

Onye isi ọrụ okpomọkụ, ma ọ bụ CHO,bụ onye ọrụ gọọmentị ime obodo lekwasịrị anya n'ịlụso ihe egwu dị n'oke okpomoku ọgụ na ibelata mmetụta agwaetiti okpomọkụ nke obodo mepere emepe.

Obodo, mpaghara, na ụdị gọọmentị ime obodo ndị ọzọ na-ewe ọtụtụ ndị isi ọrụ okpomọkụ n'ọrụ. Ọnọdụ ahụ pụtara na mbido afọ nke 2020, na ọtụtụ obodo na ihu igwe na-ekpo ọkụ na-ahọpụta ndị isi ọrụ okpomọkụ iji gbalịa ibelata mmetụta na-arịwanye elu nke mgbanwe ihu igwe site na ịbawanye ndò, na-enye ebe oyi, ịkụ osisi, na ịhazi ọrụ mgbochi okpomọkụ.[1][2][3] E mepụtara ọkwa ndị ọrụ okpomọkụ mbụ na Los Angeles, Miami-Dade County, Melbourne, Athens, na Freetown.[4] Ọ bụ ụlọ ọrụ Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center nke Atlantic Council haziri atụmatụ ịmepụta ọnọdụ ndị ahụ.[5][6]

Edensibia

dezie
  1. Dehghan (2021-11-15). Stop talking, start acting, says Africa’s first extreme heat official (en). The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved on 2023-01-06.
  2. Yeung. "Africa’s First Heat Officer Faces a Daunting Task", Bloomberg.com, 2022-01-21. Retrieved on 2023-01-06. (in en)
  3. Ramirez (2022-07-20). Faced with more deadly heat waves, US cities are taking an unprecedented step (en). CNN. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved on 2023-01-06.
  4. Visram. "Meet the 7 Chief Heat Officers who are making their cities more resilient", Fast Company, 7 October 2022. Retrieved on 6 January 2023.
  5. Moloney. "How 'chief heat officers' keep cities cool as the world warms", Reuters, 2022-11-09. Retrieved on 2023-01-06. (in en)
  6. McLeod. "Every City Needs a Chief Heat Officer", Foreign Affairs, 2022-05-26. Retrieved on 2023-01-06. (in en-US)