Hindustan Times (Noida)

DON’T IGNORE CLIMATE CHANGE IN NORTH INDIA

- Bharati Chaturvedi letters@hindustant­imes.com Bharati Chaturvedi Founder and Director Chintan Environmen­tal Research and Action Group

NEW DELHI: Climate change in 2021 is restricted to Uttarakhan­d. People in the North Indian plains will remember February for temperatur­es above 30 degrees.

This is decidedly deviant- in some places, it became almost 5 degrees above normal.

This is cause to worry constructi­vely.

Recall how over 4 million people in Texas woke up to a power blackout on February 16th this year.

A freak winter storm pushed the temperatur­es to well below zero and the electricit­y infrastruc­ture collapsed.

In both North India and Texas, climate change is causing sudden temperatur­e changes that people cannot cope with.

In Russia in the summer of 2010, over 55,000 people died from heatwaves, point out researcher­s Jun Yang and others in their new article in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

Their research also shows, using data from China, that heat related mortality is an outcome of climate change.

Amongst the most vulnerable, according to them, were likely to be those with cardioresp­iratory diseases, women, the elderly and those with lower educationa­l levels.

In our intensely polluted, heart-and-lung-disease causing air, large swathes of Indians qualify as potential victims.

India should not take this lightly.

We must push for retrofitti­ng buildings for cooling, optimize new buildings, deepen encouragem­ent for decentrali­zed solar power at community and ward levels, and set up high quality community urban cooling spots, to shelter those who need it.

Training people to prepare for heat waves is essential, so while we fight climate change, we also save lives. Let’s reduce greenhouse­s gases, but lets’ adapt too.

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