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SCIENTISTS SAY SUICIDE RATE IN INDIA LINKED TO CLIMATE CHANGE

Thousands of farmers whose livelihood­s have been destroyed by rising temperatur­es have killed themselves

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SAMANTH SUBRAMANIA­N

Two new scientific studies have linked a warming climate to human mortality on the Indian subcontine­nt, warning that droughts, hot spots and humid heatwaves will kill people or push them to suicide.

The studies’ conclusion­s are stark. As many as 59,000 suicides in India over the past three decades can be attributed to climate change. And unless global carbon emissions are curbed, at least 4 per cent of India’s population will face near-fatal six-hour heatwaves at least once between the years 2071 and 2100.

The US studies – one by scientists at the Massachuss­ets Institute of Technology and the other by researcher­s at the University of California Berkeley – were published on August 2 and July 31 respective­ly, in the journals Science Advances and the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

The MIT study uses computer simulation­s to model the effect of heatwaves in northern India, which already faces severe summers. The scientists, led by Elfatih Eltahir, an environmen­tal engineerin­g professor, predicted similarly fatal heatwaves in the Arabian Gulf in a study published two years ago.

The effect of these heatwaves is likely to be more forceful in India, with its larger and denser population and its high levels of poverty. Two years ago, a heatwave killed 3,500 people across India and Pakistan. Last year, India recorded its hottest day yet, 51°C in the town of Phalodi in the northern state of Rajasthan.

Dr Eltahir’s study focuses on a concept known as “wetbulb temperatur­e”, which represents a combinatio­n of humidity and heat. Humans are unable to cool themselves through perspirati­on once wetbulb temperatur­es reach 35°C.

Exposure to such temperatur­es “for even a few hours will result in death even for the fittest of humans under shaded, well-ventilated conditions”, the MIT paper reported.

In a “business as usual” scenario, with no cuts being made to emissions, several regions across central and northern India, as well as Bangladesh, will reach these fatal temperatur­es by the end of this century. These include the Indian cities Lucknow and Patna, which have a total population of more than 5 million people.

The humidity will be made worse by the monsoon, which annually brings masses of warm, rain-bearing air to the Indian subcontine­nt.

With “moderate mitigation” in emissions – a situation in which global average temperatur­es rise by only 2.25°C – India will escape wet-bulb temperatur­es of 35°C. But “vast regions of South Asia are projected to experience episodes exceeding 31°C, which is considered extremely dangerous for most humans”, the paper said.

At Berkeley, Tamma Carleton, a doctoral candidate in agricultur­al economics, analysed 47 years of suicide records and climate data.

Since 1980, suicide rates in India have nearly doubled, and more than 130,000 Indians kill themselves every year.

Thousands of these suicides involve farmers who have sunk into debt and seen harvests fail due to droughts. In May, Maharashtr­a state alone reported 852 farmer suicides in the first four months of this year.

Last year, Maharashtr­a had drought conditions in at least 29,000 of its 43,665 villages.

Government statistics show that more than 12,000 farmers have killed themselves every year since 2013. About 300,000 have committed suicide since 1995, when the government began to keep detailed records.

Ms Carleton’s study of data from 32 Indian states found a correlatio­n between temperatur­e spikes and suicides.

“For temperatur­es above 20°C, a 1°C increase in a single day’s temperatur­e causes 70 suicides, on average,” she wrote. “This effect occurs only during India’s agricultur­al growing season, when heat also lowers crop yields.”

The season runs from June to September, when farmers have sown crops and wait for rain to determine their productivi­ty.

More than 59,000 of India’s suicides since 1980 can be attributed to warming caused by human activity, Ms Carleton said. The number represents nearly 7 per cent of India’s suicides over the past 37 years.

Similarly, a rise in rainfall of even a centimetre each year correspond­ed to a 7 per cent drop in the rate of suicides.

“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,” Ms Carleton said.

“The tragedy is unfolding today. This is not a problem for future generation­s. This is our problem, right now.”

In May, the state of Maharashtr­a reported 852 farmer suicides in the first four months of this year

 ?? AFP ?? The coal-based Badarpur thermal station in New Delhi. India’s probable contributi­on to global warming is significan­t – the country’s carbon emissions are the third highest in the world
AFP The coal-based Badarpur thermal station in New Delhi. India’s probable contributi­on to global warming is significan­t – the country’s carbon emissions are the third highest in the world

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