HEAT IN INDIA
1. Context
2. Increase in temperature
- A study by the Centre for Study of Science, Technology and Policy (CSTEP) on the historical climate in India shows that temperature in India has been steadily increasing during both summer and winter.
- The recorded increase in maximum and minimum temperature over 30 years (1990-2019) is up to 0.9° C and 0.5° C, respectively.
- Summer temperatures have increased by 0.5° C to 0.9° C in many districts in Punjab, Haryana, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan, Gujarat and the northeast.
- Likewise, winter temperatures have also increased by 0.5° C to 0.9° C in 54 per cent of India's districts, with higher levels of warming in the northern states compared to the southern States.
- This increasing heat is a cause of suffering and death in extreme cases.
- It undermines systems such as agriculture and other climate-sensitive sectors that support the livelihoods and well-being of people.
3. IFRC Report
- A joint report by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre on preparing for heatwaves state that an extreme heat event that was likely to happen only once in every 50 years without the influence of humans on climate is now likely to happen five times with human-induced climate change in the same period.
- If the warming is under 2° C, such events will occur 14 times; if the warming is kept under 4° C, they will occur almost 40 times.
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- Climate projections for the districts of India by the CSTEP study for 30 years of 2021-2050 show that the maximum temperature during summer will increase even under a "moderate emissions" scenario.
- The increase is higher under higher emissions scenarios likely to be greater than 2° C and up to 3.5° C in over 100 districts and 1.52° C in about 455 districts.
- Even winter minimum temperatures are projected to increase by 0.5° C to 3.5° C in the future.
- While the highest warming of 2.5° C to 3° C is projected in fewer than 1 per cent of the districts, an increase by 1° C to 1.5° C is projected in about 485 districts.
- Both summer maximum and winter minimum temperatures will increase in the future.
- This can affect the growth of plants, ecological systems and even the carbon economy as the extreme variations in temperature between days and nights will affect the quality of the soil.
- The diurnal temperature range (DTR) the variation between high air temperature and low temperature during a single day is also changing.
- A December 2020 study supported by the Department of Science and Technology reported an alarming decline in DTR between 1991 and 2016 over the northwest parts of the Ganetic plain and central India agroclimatic zones.
- This decline signifies an asymmetric increase in the minimum temperature compared to the maximum, which in turn increases the risk of heat stress.
- This also leads to drought, crop failure and higher morbidity and mortality.
- The joint report by IFRC and others also states that shortly, heat waves could meet and surpass the human threshold to withstand them physiologically and socially, leading to large-scale suffering, death and migration.
- From an urban perspective, the combined effects of warming and urbanisation will cause a significant increase in the number of people at risk of extreme heat.
- According to a 2019 International Labour Organisation Report, India is expected to lose 5.8 per cent of working hours in 2030 due to heat stress.
- The loss in the agriculture and construction sectors will be 9.04 per cent, which translates to 34 million full-time jobs.
- The July 2021 study suggests that future death rates caused by extreme heat could be staggeringly high by the end of the century, which is comparable in magnitude to all cancers or infectious diseases.
- More than ever, states must step up and share responsibility with other stakeholders to implement the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction through improved early warning systems, the creation of public awareness and the formulation of heat action plans.
- Emergency cooling centres (Similar to the ones in Toronto and Paris);
- Survival guides that are strategically displayed to survive extreme heat or heat waves (like in Athens;
- White roofs (Los Angeles)
- Green rooftops (Rotterdam)
- Self Shading tower blocks (Abu Dhabi) and
- Green Corridors (Medellin).
- But most of all, it is crucial we prepare district-level heat hotspot maps so that different departments of a State and/ or district can design long-term measures to reduce deaths due to extreme heat.
For Prelims & Mains
For Prelims: Heat waves, climate change, CSTEP, IFRC, DTR, International Labour Organisation Report,
For Mains:
1. What is the Diurnal Temperature range? Discuss the innovative climate action strategies that one can emulate.
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1. What are the possible limitations of India in mitigating global warming at present and in the immediate future? (2010)
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only 1. Ans: (a) |
Source: The Hindu