India’s climate score: high on vulnerability, low on resilience

Relevance: Mains: G.S paper III: Environment

Context

  • HSBC’s 2018 assessment of India ranks it as the country most vulnerable to climate change.

Major problems

  • Against scientific warnings, carbon emissions continue to rise in China, the U.S., and India.
  • Brazil is encouraging unprecedented deforestation of the Amazon rainforest. As forest fires worsen global warming, the hardest hit by the resulting floods, storms, heatwaves, and droughts will be in India.
  • Cutting hurdles to investment can boost short-term growth and benefit interest groups. But damaging the environment would be self-defeating as it would impact long-term growth and well-being.
    Vulnerability threat to India
  • A number of Indian States have experienced extreme heatwaves in the past three years, and Delhi recently recorded a temperature of 48°C, its hottest day in 21 years.
  • India’s exposure to climate hazards is heightened by the location of its coastline in the Indian Ocean, Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea.
  • India also has a high population density located in the danger zone. For instance, Kerala, which experienced intense floods and landslides in 2018 and 2019, is among the States with the highest density.
  • Increasing temperatures and changing seasonal rainfall patterns are aggravating droughts and hurting agriculture across the country.
  • Extreme storms like the one that hit Odisha this year and the floods that swept Chennai in 2015 are damaging when infrastructure is not resilient.

Importance of resilience

  • India must boost its coastal and inland defences.
  • It needs to do more to build resilience in the sectors of agriculture, fisheries, manufacturing, energy, transport, health, and education.
  • The priority for spending at the national and State levels for disaster management needs to rise.
  • Adequate resources must also be allocated for implementing climate action plans that most States have now prepared.
  • India must reinforce its infrastructure and adapt its agriculture and industry.
  • India should replace urgently its fossil fuels with renewable energy.

Way ahead

  • Global leadership must act with greater urgency. Countries should switch rapidly from polluting fossil fuels to cleaner renewable energy.
  • There is a need for building much stronger coastal and inland defences against climatic damage.

 

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