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When the City Never Sleeps: Urban Climate Vulnerabilities in Ghana’s Shift to a 24-Hour Economy

When the City Never Sleeps: Urban Climate Vulnerabilities in Ghana’s Shift to a 24-Hour Economy

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Authors

Abdul Ganiu Tanko 

Abstract

Ghana’s 24H+ Programme proposes a transition toward a 24-hour economy as a strategy to expand employment, strengthen productivity, and modernize national development. While the policy outlines economic and infrastructural priorities, its implications for urban climate risks and resilience have not been examined. This study assesses how continuous economic activity may influence climate-related vulnerabilities in Ghanaian cities, with attention to energy demand, nighttime heat exposure, emissions, mobility systems, and services that already face stress under current climate conditions. Using a policy-focused analytical approach, the paper evaluates the 24H+ Programme through established urban climate and resilience frameworks, including IPCC risk concepts and research on climate impacts in rapidly growing African cities. The analysis suggests that a 24-hour economy could intensify existing pressures, especially heat, energy use, and exposure risks, unless supported by deliberate adaptation measures and climate-responsive urban planning. The paper highlights the need for integrated governance, resilient infrastructure, and equitable protection for low-income communities that are often more exposed to climate risks. It concludes by proposing planning and policy actions that align the 24H+ economic transition with Ghana’s climate commitments and the broader goal of building resilient urban systems.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.31223/X5SJ2T

Subjects

Environmental Sciences

Keywords

Urban climate risk, 24-hour economy, climate resilience, Urban systems, Ghana 24H+ Programme, climate adaptation, Urban governance

Dates

Published: 2025-11-29 06:24

Last Updated: 2025-11-29 06:24

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Data Availability (Reason not available):
All data underlying the findings in this study are publicly available. The analysis relies on: 1. The Ghana 24H+ Programme policy document (government-published). 2. Published climate and urban research articles cited in the manuscript. No proprietary or restricted data were used.

Conflict of interest statement:
The author declares no competing interests. There are no financial, personal, or professional conflicts that could have influenced the research presented in this manuscript.