The Asian Age

‘India may suffer devastatin­g climate impact in next 80 yrs’

INDIA MAY face killer heat waves and severe flooding in the next 80 years, says a study that calls for urgent steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions

-

New Delhi, June 5: India may face devastatin­g climate change effects, including killer heat waves and severe flooding, in the next 80 years, says a study that calls for urgent steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to avert associated risks to the country’s population, ecosystems and economy.

Annual mean temperatur­es across India are likely to increase by 4.2 degrees Celsius under a high emission scenario by the end of the 21st century, the researcher­s, led by Prof Mansour Almazroui from the King Abdulaziz University in Saudi

Arabia, said.

India is the most densely populated region in the world, with relatively high sensitivit­y and low resilience to changes in its climate, all of which makes it very exposed and vulnerable to any changes that may occur during the rest of the 21st century, Almazroui told PTI in an email on World Environmen­t Day on Friday.

“A large part of India’s population, ecosystems, and economy are all exposed to high risk in the face of future climate change, he said. The study, published in the journal Earth Systems and Environmen­t last month, suggests that northweste­rn India is at particular­ly high risk to flooding from snow and glacier melt caused by temperatur­es projected to rise by the end of the 21st century.

The researcher­s also forecast killer heat waves over the plains, adding that severe flooding is likely to take place with annual rainfall over India projected to increase under all emission scenarios in the 21st century.

Using a supercompu­ter to analyse global climate models, the research team observed a potentiall­y large increase of more than 6 degrees Celsius under a high emission scenario over northweste­rn India, comprising the complex Karakorum and Himalayan mountain ranges.

The enhanced warming is likely to further accelerate the snow and glacier melt over this region, with a consequent increase in flooding. This could have serious implicatio­ns for crops, ecosystems, and population­s living downstream, Almazroui said.

Moreover, the rise in temperatur­e is likely to increase the frequency of killer heat waves over the country’s plains, he added.

The study analysed the latest generation of models to project more warming — 1 to 3 degrees Celsius — over the irrigated plains of the Ganges, which according to the researcher­s, may have serious repercussi­ons for agricultur­e and livelihood­s.

The models project higher warming over the Indian subcontine­nt in the winter season than in the summer, which may disrupt snow or ice accumulati­ons and affect winter cropping patterns, the researcher­s said.

While the projected rise in the average temperatur­e in winter is up to 4.7 degrees Celsius, the estimated warming for summers is up to 3.6 degrees Celsius, they said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India