04/23/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/24/2026 10:13
New Report Finds Expansion of Tree Canopies Have Proven Financial and Environmental Benefits
New York, NY - Comptroller Mark Levine today released New York City's Living Infrastructure, a report that outlines the financial, environmental, health and resiliency benefits of a robust urban tree canopy, and strategies to better maintain, grow and fund it.
"New York City's 7 million trees are a vital component of our infrastructure across the five boroughs, and it's essential we treat them as such," said New York City Comptroller Mark Levine. "Making a long-term investment in their care drives down energy costs, asthma rates, and damage to our infrastructure. New York City can transform the concrete jungle into an urban forest through creative, dedicated efforts."
As part of a series of announcements during the week of Earth Day, Comptroller Levine released a new report, New York City's Living Infrastructure: Funding and Managing NYC's Urban Forest and Tree Canopy. The report examined the impact of New York City's tree population - notably canopies that create a "roof" of shade over asphalt and concrete, mitigating extreme heat. Tree canopies provide the City an estimated $120.6 million in benefits annually because they reduce cooling costs, remove 1,100 tons of air pollutants, and absorb more than 1 billion gallons of storm water. The report also highlights the public health risks associated with inequitable canopy distribution, as neighborhoods with lower coverage correlate strongly with higher levels of youth asthma emergency department visits.
The report also found:
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