Millennium Post

Experts blame climate change, unplanned DEVELOPMEN­T FOR FLOODS IN UP AND BIHAR

- ADITI GUPTA

NEW DELHI: As heavy rains pound several states across India throwing life out of gear, environmen­t experts have blamed climate change and rising global temperatur­e for an erratic rainfall pattern which has claimed over 100 lives.

While some experts stress on reducing carbon footprint, some feel it is not a natural phenomenon but a result of unplanned constructi­on.

Several parts of India are currently facing severe flooding as a result of unusually heavy monsoon rain, with the states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar particular­ly affected.

Nearly 110 people have died in the last five days. While 79 people have died in UP, 28 lives have been lost in Bihar.

Tarun Gopalakris­hnan, climate policy researcher at the Centre for Science and Environmen­t, said there was a need to reduce carbon emissions as climate change was resulting in erratic rains. Flood-affected people carry relief material packets on their heads as they wade through a flooded street in Rajendra Nagar area of Patna

"Climate change is resulting in more erratic rainfall patterns, including a large portion of seasonal rainfall being concentrat­ed in a limited number of days, leading to flooding. Limiting the human cost of this trend will require drasticall­y cutting carbon emissions around the globe, while investing in adaptation for the new climate reality," he said.

Scientists on the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) believe that the rise in global and local temperatur­es have contribute­d to the observed anomalies in rainfall.

"Parts of Bihar and the Uttar Pradesh-uttarakhan­d belt already exhibit a rising trend in terms of the number of heavy rainfall events. Though we cannot pinpoint each event to climate change unless we do in-depth attributio­n study, it is likely that the rise in global and local temperatur­es have contribute­d to observed anomalies in rainfall," said Roxy Mathew Koll, Co-author of IPCC'S special report on oceans and cryosphere.

"Specifical­ly, widespread heavy rains resulting in floods are on a rise across the central and west coast, and parts of north/north-east India," he said Another co-author of the report, Anjal Prakash, said in the last week of September 2019, many parts of peninsular India (Hyderabad and Pune), coastal region (Kolkata, Gujarat, Goa, Machilipat­nam and Vizag) and sub-himalayan region (Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura, Bihar, West Bengal, Sikkim, Uttarakhan­d and Himachal Pradesh) received heavy downpour that is wreaking havoc.

"These areas have received rains unpreceden­ted in recent history. The recent IPCC report has forecasted these variations due to changes in the ocean and cryosphere...," Prakash said.

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PTI

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