The Borneo Post

Rising temperatur­es could drive up farmer suicides in India without govt help — Study

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MUMBAI: Climate change has led to more than 59,000 farmer suicides in India over the last three decades and rising temperatur­es could drive the suicide rate up further without government help for farmers, according to a US university study.

University of California Berkeley researcher Tamma Carleton said suicide rates in India have nearly doubled since 1980 and claim more than 130,000 lives every year, with about 7 per cent of these attributab­le to warming linked to human activity.

“It was both shocking and hear tbreaking to see that thousands of people face such bleak conditions that they are driven to harm themselves,” Carleton said in a statement.

“Without interventi­ons that help families adapt to a warmer climate, it’s likely we will see a rising number of lives lost to suicide as climate change worsens in India,” she added.

The study published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences found every 1 degree Celsius increase above 20°C during the growing season led to about 65 suicides across India.

A 5° C increase had five times that effect, showed the study which focused on the summer monsoon period June- September.

More than half India’ s population depends on the land for a livelihood.

Tens of thousands of farmers have killed themselves over the last couple of decades in India - by drinking pesticide or hanging themselves - as unseasonal rains and drought led to crop failures, leaving farmers struggling with debt. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An Indian farmer from Tamil Nadu state arranges human skulls, said to belong to farmers who had committed suicide, during a protest in New Delhi. — AFP photo
An Indian farmer from Tamil Nadu state arranges human skulls, said to belong to farmers who had committed suicide, during a protest in New Delhi. — AFP photo

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