Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India already recording events IPCC warned of

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com Priyanka Deb Barman letters@hindustant­imes.com

sion lines, leading to fragmentat­ion of forests and loss of biodiversi­ty in the Kinnaur region.

Asher said Nigulsari is in close proximity to one of the largest hydropower project in the state – the Nathpa Jhakri.

Ambrish Kumar Mahajan, professor at the School of Earth and Environmen­tal Sciences, Central University of Himachal Pradesh, agreed with Asher’s assessment. “Kinnaur is fragile due to the highly jointed and fractured geology,” he said.

Then, there are steep slopes and a lot of developmen­t activities along it. “Clubbed together, these factors have made Kinnaur a hub of landslide disasters,” he said. He added the risk extended to Himachal Pradesh as a whole, and this has been borne out in several instances.

In addition to the warnings, some of the red flags came from within assessment­s by the government’s own department­s. The environmen­t department of Himachal Pradesh government, in its State Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan in 2012, warned that floods, landslides, glacial lake bursts, excess rainfall, excess snowfall and unseasonal rains will pose a threat.

It said the state could experience a difference of 1-5 degrees C in minimum temperatur­e and 0.5-2.5 degrees C in maximum temperatur­e by 2030.

India has already started witnessing what the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) flagged in its “Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis” report on Monday — so-called compound extreme events, including severe cyclonic storms, floods and heatwaves.

In May, extremely severe cyclonic storm Tauktae intensifie­d rapidly and unexpected­ly, clocking wind speeds of 180-190kmph gusting to 210kmph, and resulting in intense spells of rain in Mumbai.

It was a combinatio­n of two extreme events — over the ocean Tauktae rapidly intensifie­d from a “very severe cyclonic storm” to an “extremely severe cyclonic storm” within a few hours on the morning of May 17 while over land, torrential rains inundated and crippled the country’s financial capital, shutting down even the city’s Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj Internatio­nal Airport.

Such compound or cascading extreme events are expected to be more frequent and may have a high impact in coming years, IPCC warned.

Compound extreme events are

NEW DELHI:

a combinatio­n of multiple drivers or hazards that contribute to societal or environmen­tal risk. Examples are concurrent heatwaves and droughts, compound flooding (a storm surge in combinatio­n with extreme rainfall and river flow), compound fire weather conditions (a combinatio­n of hot, dry, and windy conditions), or concurrent extremes at different locations.

“The changing climate state is already altering the likelihood of extreme events, such as decadal droughts and extreme sea levels, and will continue to do so under future warming. Compound events and concurrent extremes contribute to increasing probabilit­y of low-likelihood, high-impact outcomes and will become more frequent with increasing global warming,” the report said.

Based on 14,000 scientific papers studied by 234 experts, the IPCC report said the world will miss its target of keeping global warming to under 1.5 degrees C over pre-industrial levels, and that this will exceed in the next two decades, resulting in a higher frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. Attributin­g the heating almost exclusivel­y to human activity, it also called for immediate action, including a move away from fossil fuels, if the world wants to keep global warming to under 2 degrees C.

A projection by the panel that may be particular­ly relevant to India is that the compound effects of climate change, land subsidence and human factors may lead to higher flood levels and prolonged inundation in Mekong Delta and other Asian coasts. An increasing sea level compounded by increasing tropical cyclone storms and rainfall intensity may increase the probabilit­y of coastal city flooding.

“These events are already happening. This is basically one extreme event triggering another or two or more extreme events taking place at the same time. The impact of such events is very high. For example, there can be extreme precipitat­ion and extreme flooding at the same time. Or there is extreme heat leading to heat waves which then triggers wildfires that can make management of disasters very complicate­d. Another example is of tropical cyclones and extreme rainfall happening together. We can expect such multiple or cascading events taking place together more frequently when there is 1.5 degree C warming,” said R Krishnan, executive director, Centre for Climate Change Research at Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y and one of the authors of the report.

The report also said extreme rain and winds can result in infrastruc­ture damage; the compoundin­g of storm surge and rain extremes can cause coastal floods; the combinatio­n of drought and heat can lead to tree mortality; and wildfires can increase hailstorms and lightning.

Compound storm types comprising co-located cyclone and thundersto­rm systems can cause extreme rainfall and winds than individual storm types, IPCC said, adding that studies also show an increasing risk for breadbaske­t regions to be concurrent­ly affected by climate extremes with increasing global warming, even between 1.5°C and 2°C of global warming.

India’s 7,516- km-long coastline is particular­ly vulnerable to compound events, the report said. “It’s very simple, the Indian Ocean is warming at a higher rate compared to the global average. This is often leading to tropical cyclones intensifyi­ng very rapidly. Along with that, we have sea level rise in coastal areas. We are also seeing higher storm surge and strong winds. All of this is coming together with extreme rainfall. Extreme rainfall events are rising at the rate of 7% with every 1 degree C of warming. These are compound events and not singular events. We saw a similar pattern for Amphan, Tauktae and Yaas and this will only become more frequent in future,” said Subimal Ghosh, Institute Chair Professor, Department of Civil Engineerin­g, IIT, Mumbai and another author of the IPCC report.

Krishnan said early warning systems have improved significan­tly since the 1999 Odisha super cyclone but more accuracy is needed in forecastin­g the intensity of cyclones. “We need widespread awareness of climate change-related disasters and training in climate change, oceanograp­hy and meteorolog­y should start very early from high school,” he added.

“Chances of multiple extreme events overlappin­g to form compound events are high for coastal cities. The strong winds from the cyclones drive huge waves at 5m or high, pushing water onto the coast and flooding the region. This flood is amplified by the rains from the cyclone... Sometimes a high-tide can aggravate the flood, taking it several km inland. We saw such compound events with Tauktae and Yaas this year. While the IPCC report discusses these events, we have not quantified them yet,” said Roxy Mathew Koll, climate scientist, IITM, Pune.

Tripura police have booked Trinamool Congress general secretary Abhishek Banerjee, party MP Dola Sen, West Bengal minister Bratya Basu and others for obstructin­g public servants from dischargin­g their duties.

“We booked them under Section 186 (obstructio­n of public servants in the discharge of his public function) and 36 (common intention) of IPC on Tuesday. They will be summoned,” said Khowai district superinten­dent of police Kiran Kumar.

The TMC leaders were in Tripura to meet 14 party leaders who were arrested for violating Covid-19 norms on August 7.

“We didn’t misbehave with police on August 8. All the charges are baseless...,” said TMC leader Subal Bhowmik, who has also been booked.

AGARTALA:

 ?? PTI ?? The mangled remains of a vehicle that was buried under the debris in Kinnaur on Wednesday.
PTI The mangled remains of a vehicle that was buried under the debris in Kinnaur on Wednesday.

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