European cities are rolling out hundreds of climate interventions—from rooftop greening to electrified transport—hoping to survive a hotter, more volatile future. Yet a new study suggests that, despite a swelling research pipeline, the evidence for what truly works in everyday city life remains surprisingly thin.
The research, published in Environmental Research Letters and co-authored by scholars at Radboud University, reviewed more than 1,600 scientific papers covering mitigation and adaptation actions across over 1,200 European cities. Lead author Natascha Wagner explains that the team aimed to map which policies perform best in specific city contexts and to clarify what cities can learn from peers with similar characteristics.
A central finding is that “one-size-fits-all” climate planning may fail. Interventions successful in large, fast-growing metropolitan regions in Spain may not translate to shrinking, older towns in Poland. The underlying stressors differ: southern cities often contend with extreme heat and water scarcity, while parts of eastern Europe face flood risks and high-intensity industrial emissions.
To make comparisons meaningful, the authors emphasize tailoring policy evaluation to comparable city types rather than mixing fundamentally different urban realities. This typology-driven approach is intended to improve decision-making by linking interventions to the conditions under which they were most effective.
However, the study also highlights fragmentation across the research landscape. Many investigations focus on narrow cases—such as electric vehicles in one city—while others evaluate unrelated infrastructure upgrades elsewhere. That scattered evidence base makes it harder to identify generalizable patterns.
Even more concerning, much of the existing literature relies on models and simulations instead of measuring outcomes in the real world. Wagner notes that some scenarios assume unlikely conditions, such as an entire city switching to vegan diets. These thought experiments can be useful, but they do not confirm what happens on the ground.
Kyrychenko argues that climate policy needs more observational data capturing real behavior, health impacts, mobility shifts, and environmental changes. Without measurements outside controlled assumptions, policymakers may overestimate benefits or miss unintended effects.
In response to recent extreme heat, the researchers call for systematic collection of city-level observational datasets. The next leap in climate research, they suggest, may not be inventing entirely new solutions, but evaluating existing ones with rigorous, comparable evidence.
Subject of Research: Climate mitigation and adaptation strategies tailored for different types of European cities; effectiveness of policies in practice.
Article Title: Climate mitigation and adaptation strategies tailored for different types of European cities: a typology and associated systematic review
News Publication Date: today
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ae7e97
References: Environmental Research Letters (DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ae7e97)
Image Credits:
Keywords: European cities, climate mitigation, climate adaptation, systematic review, city typology, observational data, policy evaluation, extreme heat, urban resilience, environmental research

