Cyclone Biparjoy Is ‘Stealing’ the Monsoon and Bringing Heat Waves

The cyclone has brought excess rainfall in northwest India, but also sucked moisture-laden winds from south, central and east India – causing a rain deficit that magnifies the heat wave.

Kochi: Cyclone Biparjoy, which hit the northern West coast of India last week, brought excess rainfall to Gujarat and Rajasthan. But it has “stolen” the monsoon from states like Karnataka – causing a rainfall deficit – while also bringing heat waves to many parts of north India, including Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.

Climate change could be aggravating the situation, experts said. Studies already show that recent decades have witnessed higher sea surface temperatures in the Arabian Sea, and these are linked to an increase in the intensity, frequency, and duration of cyclonic storms and very severe cyclonic storms over the ocean.

Biparjoy, the disaster

Cyclone Biparjoy, true to its name (‘biparjoy’ translates to disaster in Bangla), has been a disaster in many ways. 

Biparjoy, which struck the coast of Gujarat as a severe cyclonic storm and later weakened into a depression, caused high-speed winds and extremely heavy rains in Rajasthan and Gujarat, bringing the states excess and unseasonal rainfall. As per the IMD, Rajasthan has recorded an excess of 320% rainfall since June 1, while it is 166% in the case of Gujarat. More than 40 people were injured in Gujarat, reported Livemint. Power outages struck almost 4,500 villages in Saurashtra and Kutch.

The IMD has also warned of heavy rainfall in Madhya Pradesh. 

However, Biparjoy has also delayed the monsoon in several states. Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Telangana and Maharashtra have witnessed a rain deficit of more than 80% since June 1, as per the IMD. Karnataka, meanwhile, has recorded a 71% rain deficit since June 1.

Biparjoy has affected the progress of the southwest monsoon over Karnataka, IMD officials told the New Indian Express. IMD-Bengaluru’s director A. Prasad told the newspaper that Biparjoy has affected the monsoon wind circulation pattern. However in the days to come, conditions would become favourable for the progress of the monsoon, he added.

Simultaneously, many northern states are reeling under a heatwave. In its warning issued on June 19, the IMD said that on the preceding day, “Heat Wave to Severe Heat Wave” conditions prevailed over many parts of interior Odisha, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh and in some parts of south Bihar. Heatwave conditions occurred in parts of north coastal Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, parts of Vidarbha and in isolated pockets over east Madhya Pradesh, east Uttar Pradesh and Gangetic West Bengal, the IMD said.

Union health minister Mansukh Mandaviya will chair a high-level meeting on June 20 to review public health preparedness, reported Indian Express. The IMD warning also mentioned that heat wave conditions over East India and adjoining areas are likely to “abate gradually” from June 20.

Cyclone, monsoon deficit, heat waves: All linked

The arrival and progress of Biparjoy, the monsoon rainfall deficit and heat waves are all linked, Roxy Koll Mathew, a climate scientist at Pune’s Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, told The Wire.

The cyclone has taken away a lot of moisture that should have gone into monsoon rains in south, central and east India, Mathew pointed out. 

“Instead, Gujarat and Rajasthan got the rains. So the rest of the region didn’t get rain to release the heat and was also cloud-less, exposing [the areas] to more heat,” he said.

Cloudless skies during the daytime increase the amount of solar radiation, Mathew added.

And are these events linked to climate change in any way?

“The additional heat from climate change is getting accumulated (or trapped) in a few regions during these events,” Mathew told The Wire.

Such as, for instance, in the heat waves that north India is currently experiencing. 

“Moreover, the intense and more frequent cyclones in the Arabian Sea are also due to warmer seas and more available moisture due to climate change,” Mathew said.

Recent studies have shown that the sea surface temperatures over the Arabian Sea have increased by 1.2°C to 1.4°C in the recent decades compared to four decades ago, Hindustan Times reported. Warmer seas are linked to an increase in the intensity, frequency, and duration of cyclonic storms and very severe cyclonic storms over the Arabian Sea, it reported. Two recent studies also showed how climate change is altering the dynamics of the Indian Ocean as well. Heatwaves in the Indian Ocean are reducing monsoonal rains over central India, while the rapid warming of the ocean’s northern portions is intensifying cyclones, The Wire Science reported last year.

Climate Change Made the April 2023 Heat Wave Across India 30 Times More Likely

And as the world continues to warm up, climate change will increase the chances of such an event occurring, the report said.

Kochi: Human-induced climate change made the April 2023 heat wave across India and Bangladesh 30 times more likely, as per a report by an international team of climate scientists as part of the World Weather Attribution group published on May 17.

Their report, which also studied the heat wave that swept across parts of Thailand and Laos, found that the heat wave would have been “virtually impossible” in these countries if it wasn’t for climate change.

And as the world continues to warm up, the likelihood of an event like the April 2023 humid heat wave recurring would increase, the report said. In India and Bangladesh, it would increase by three times if we reach the 2°C warming threshold, suggesting that such an event could occur every one or two years.

While India is better off when it comes to having systems in place (such as Heat Action Plans) to prepare for and deal with heat waves, there are still more improvements to be made such as ensuring differentiated vulnerability assessments that take into account factors such as gender, economic status and occupation, the authors said. Policies should also consider social protection systems such as compensatory mechanisms in place for vulnerable communities, they added.

The April 2023 heat wave 

Large parts of South Asia witnessed high temperatures between the second and fourth week of April this year. Temperatures soared in Thailand and Laos during this time. The city of Tak in Thailand recorded the country’s hottest ever temperature (45.4°C), as did two cities in Laos. Bangladesh recorded its highest maximum temperature in several decades (mercury touched 40.6°C) and registered several cases of heat strokes among people. 

In India too, April was extremely hot. Pragyaraj in Uttar Pradesh recorded 44.6°C on April 17. The India Meteorological Department’s (IMD) predictions of heat wave conditions over north, central and east India – including the states of Maharashtra, Bihar, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Delhi-NCR – came true over these days. On April 16, 13 people lost their lives in Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, due to exposure to the heat at a public event; there were reports of more than 600 hospitalisations too.

To study this heat wave and if it was linked to climate change in any way, 23 climate scientists as part of the World Weather Attribution group (a collaborative initiative between several international institutes including the Indian Institute of Technology that conduct rapid attribution analyses to assess the role of climate change in the occurrence of an extreme weather event) got together. The team used observed temperature data and climate model simulations to study the prolonged heat wave conditions that occurred over parts of South Asia. They estimated a Heat Index (HI, which accounts for the impacts of both high temperatures and humidity levels on the human body) averaged over four days, across two specific regions: south and central India (the states of West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Goa and Maharashtra) and Bangladesh, and Thailand and Laos.

Representative image of a heat wave. Photo: PTI/Kamal Kishore

Role of climate change 

The team found that estimated HI values exceeded 41°C – the threshold considered as “dangerous” for the human body to cope with the temperature increase – over large parts of both South Asian regions between the second and fourth weeks of April. In a few areas, it even neared 54°C or above, which is considered “extremely dangerous” for human life.

They found that climate change made the April 2023 heat waves across India and Bangladesh 30 times more likely. Due to climate change, such an event – which has a chance to occur once in five years – is now 2°C hotter in terms of the Heat Index than before. 

Without climate change, the heat waves across Thailand and Laos would have been “virtually impossible”, said Mariam Zacharias, one of the co-authors of the report, in an online press briefing on May 17. This event occurring in Thailand and Laos would have been very rare had there been no climate change. 

Their climate models suggest that in future, there will be a “strong increase in likelihood and intensity” of humid heat events such as the one April 2023 witnessed in both regions. As global warming increases, the likelihood of an event like the April 2023 humid heat wave recurring in India and Bangladesh would increase by three times (occurring once every one or two years), if we reach the 2°C warming levels above pre-industrial times, the report found. In Thailand and Laos, it would be 10 times more likely in such a scenario.

Though India and Bangladesh have developed Heat Action Plans, Thailand and Laos don’t have any yet, the report noted. Heat-related fatalities have decreased in regions where HAPs have been implemented, such as in Ahmedabad and Odisha in India, it said. 

“However, these solutions are often out of reach for the most vulnerable people, highlighting the need to improve vulnerability assessments and design interventions that account for group-specific needs,” the report read.

Also Read: How Well Do You Know Your Heatwave? A Study of India Data

Need differentiated vulnerability assessments

There are a number of health implications that heat waves cause that are not talked about or recorded, including fatalities, said Emmanuel Raju, of the Department of Public Health, Global Health Section and Copenhagen Centre for Disaster, Denmark, in a press briefing to the media. Factors such as age, gender, economic status, caste, hierarchy and informality allow or disallow access to resources to tackle heat wave impacts, he said. He took the example of informality: this region has a very high population in these regions that live in informal settlements, which bring in questions of access to resources such as access to health care or cooling and fans.

Street vendors, farmers, and others in the informal economy are more vulnerable and heat waves impact their abilities to work, including by causing not just health concerns but also reduced incomes, he said.

“It’s important to talk about who can adapt, who can cope, and who has resources to be able to do this,” Raju said. We need to talk about both adaptation and mitigation in the context of climate change and discussions on loss and damage, he added. 

Vulnerabilities are an important component in preparing for heat waves and are differentiated across and within the countries, said co-author of the report Anshu Ogra, School of Public Policy, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India, in the press briefing. Vulnerability assessment in HAPs, therefore, becomes crucial, she said. 

“There is an important need to institutionalise these processes across the board, and talk about it in terms of policy,” added Raju. For example, there is no access to relief, such as compensation or any specific social protection system, afforded to communities that are impacted most by heat waves, he said.

Heat Action Plans: What They Are, Why We Need Them

Recent assessment of Heat Action Plans at city, district and state levels revealed several gaps, including that they are underfunded and not built for local contexts.

Kochi: At least 11 people died and more than 600 others suffered from heat-related health issues after they had to stand out in the open on Sunday, April 16, for more than five hours to attend a government award function in Maharashtra’s Navi Mumbai.

As per some reports, local officials said that the event – which has come under fire for several reasons, including the lack of adequate arrangements to deal with the heat – went against existing Heat Action Plans. 

What are Heat Action Plans, and why do we need them?

Hot, hotter, hottest

India’s summers are hot, but they’re also getting hotter. February this year, for instance, was the hottest on record in India since 1901, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).

Heat waves are now more frequent across many parts of India. As per the IMD, a heatwave is said to occur when the average maximum temperature is 4.5-6.4º C above the long-term average (or above 40º C in the plains, 30º C in hilly areas, or 37º C in coastal areas).

India recorded 280 days of heat waves across 16 states in 2022 – the most ever in a decade – as per a report by the Centre for Science and Environment. Maharashtra itself experienced four heat waves in two summer months last year. The IMD warned in February this year that in the months to come – from March to May – there was an “enhanced probability” for the occurrence of heat waves in many parts of central and adjoining northwest India. Currently, as of April 17, the IMD issued a heat wave alert for up to five days in parts of eastern and western Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Sikkim, Odisha, Jharkhand and coastal Andhra Pradesh. Schools and colleges have remained closed as the heat wave progressed in West Bengal and Tripura.

Science shows that climate change plays a major role in the increased occurrence and intensity of these heat waves. For instance, climate scientists found that climate change made the heat waves that swept across large parts of India and Pakistan in May last year a whopping 30 times more likely. 

The impacts of heat waves on human health include dehydration, dizziness, exhaustion, stroke and even death.   

Representative image of a heat wave. Photo: Eric/Flickr CC BY NC ND 2.0

Heat Action Plans

Given how much heat waves impact people, especially the poor and other vulnerable sections, governments and administrations have begun developing Heat Action Plans, which are documents that list preparatory, adaptive and responsive measures for government departments to tackle the heat and its impacts. 

Odisha’s 2022 state Heat Action Plan developed by the Odisha State Disaster Management Authority, for instance, provides Standard Operating Procedures for different departments and district administrations and also includes steps such as rescheduling working hours for daily wage labourers, provisioning drinking water and first aid facilities at temporary working sheds, changing school timings, and so on. The city of Ahmedabad implemented South Asia’s first HAP in 2013 after a heatwave in 2010. This, scientists found, may have prevented more than 1,000 deaths due to heat in 2014-15.

However, there are many gaps in HAPs in India, found a recent assessment of 37 HAPs at city, district and state levels by the Delhi-based Centre for Policy Research (CPR). These included being underfunded and not being built for local contexts.

The assessment also found that HAPs are not sufficiently transparent. There is no national repository of HAPs and very few HAPs are listed online, the report noted. The report recommends creating a national repository of HAPs within the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and that independent, and publicly accessible external evaluations of their performance be conducted regularly.

Focus areas

In December last year, the Union government said that the NDMA and the IMD are working with 23 states that are prone to heatwave conditions to develop state-level action plans. These include Delhi, Rajasthan, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Jharkhand.

HAPs are a new policy instrument and are currently spreading, Aditya Valiathan Pillai, associate fellow at CPR and one of the co-authors of the report on HAPs, wrote in an email to The Wire. It is crucial that areas like Delhi and other hot north Indian states, and humid areas which could present a high risk of mortality during a heatwave, have coverage, he said.

Do any specific levels of HAPs – such as at the state, district or local levels – take priority? 

Not necessarily, according to Pillai.

“So the idea is not to privilege HAPs at one level over the other but to figure out ways of making them work together in complementary ways,” he wrote in an email to The Wire. “So in a state, you would want the state and city/district HAPs to be designed to speak to each other.”

That’s because each level of government handles different things (as per the Constitutional division of powers), Pillai clarified. If one wants to protect agriculture from heat, for example, you need an insurance mechanism which will need to be at the state level because of the scale it will need to involve and because agriculture is a state subject.

“But setting up cooling centres would of course be better at the local level,” he wrote. 

To make our HAPs more effective and impactful, it is necessary to incorporate granular scale heat vulnerability and hotspot mapping assessments by leveraging the latest advancements in geospatial technology and field-based assessments, said Shreya Wadhawan, Research Analyst, Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW).

This involves mapping heat-sensitive areas based on land use, vegetation fraction, built-up areas, adaptive capacity, and population characteristics, she wrote in an email to The Wire

“Further, it is essential to recalibrate forecast models to region-specific thresholds for energy and water demand, crop, and health impacts to enable impact-based heat forecast alerts. This will help decision-makers plan in advance to address the issue of heat stress,” she wrote.

In a World With More and Intense Heat-Waves, a Review of What Heat Does to Us

The heat can get to you in many ways. Extreme heat in particular and human health are closely related, and research has shown that it can precipitate a huge burden of illness, apart from death.

The human body works best when its core temperature is 36-37º C and at 35º C near under the skin. But when excess heat accumulates in the body, it works to shed it: the heart rate goes up a few beats per minute and blood is driven to the skin, where it loses heat and prompts sweating.

In fact, sweating and breathing are two important ways in which the body copes with heat. However, these measures are temporary; sustained heat prevents the blood from shedding heat at the skin. If ambient humidity is high, the body will also get quickly dehydrated. If the combination of temperature and humidity, called the wet-bulb temperature, exceeds 35º C, all systems fail. This is the upper limit of survivability; even a wet-bulb temperature of 30º C is very dangerous, according to a 2017 study.

Exposure to severe heat leads directly to heat exhaustion, an illness characterised by dizziness, fatigue, headache and fainting. This is usually treated by cooling the body under a shade and supplying electrolytes. If it isn’t treated, however, heat exhaustion can lead to heat-stroke, where the body shuts down the sweating mechanism, leading to mental confusion, seizures and probably loss of consciousness.

Apart from direct effects such as illnesses and mortality, researchers have also studied the morbidity associated with chronic heat and have found that it is not peripheral. In fact, it has insidious, wide-ranging effects on organs and exacerbates pre-existing conditions such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart- and/or diabetes-related conditions, and kidney disease and chronic kidney disease (CKD).

“The main diseases of concern are asthma, rhinosinusitis, COPD and respiratory tract infections,” according to one 2014 paper published in the journal European Respiratory Review. “Groups at higher risk of climate change effects include individuals with pre-existing cardiopulmonary diseases or disadvantaged individuals.” Indeed, in 2016, researchers from the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, were able to ascertain that indoor heat and air pollution could together increase the respiratory morbidity in people with COPD.

Heat can be additionally dangerous if one’s environs don’t cool in the evening because this deprives the body of respite after a day’s work. Heat-induced deaths have been increasing around the world together with an increase in night-time temperatures.

The likelihood of these effects depends on how long the heat exists and with what intensity, together with the level of tolerance of people in that region. It also has to do with how the government and society respond to it through their institutions and communities.

Often, the most basic thing required is to allow people to take a break from the heat and drink water.

In 2016, scientists interacted with farmers in the Nellore and Prakasham districts of Andhra Pradesh, as well as in an area around Chennai, to understand a rash of CKD cases. They found that it occurred primarily in hot, rural communities where farming was the main occupation, and recurrent dehydration was the primary culprit. “Heat-stress nephropathy may represent one of the first epidemics due to global warming,” their paper added.

Pregnant women are at additional risk. One 2017 study found that the odds of a preterm delivery increased with rise in temperature, especially during the warmer months, while another suggested the same with stillbirths. According to the authors of the latter paper, their conclusions held true “even in temperate zones”. A third study published the following year also said, “Hot weather most likely harms fertility via reproductive health as opposed to sexual activity.”

Chronic heat can tamper with the arteries carrying oxygen and nutrients to the brain, causing cerebrovascular disease and disrupting normal human behaviour, while extreme heat could mess with cognitive function. A paper published in PLOS Medicine in 2018 described a study in which 44 students from a university in the Greater Boston area, Massachusetts, lived in AC and non-AC buildings before, during and after a heat-wave. Researchers then ran tests and found a significant drop in cognitive function among the students in non-AC buildings.

In similar vein, researchers suggested in a 2018 working paper that, “without air-conditioning, a 1º F hotter school year reduces that year’s learning by one percent.” Later, they add: “This work highlights the understudied role that students’ and teachers’ physical environments play in generating educational outcomes.”

Of course, these conclusions are to be taken with a pinch of salt considering the small sample size in the first case and the correlation analysis in the second.

Finally, the (unequal) effects of the climate crisis also precipitate food shortages and acute economic inequality, and force people to migrate in search of better opportunities and living conditions. In one effort to get a sense of the consequences for India, researchers from India and the US analysed attributes associated with poverty, poor health, working conditions, age and social status, together with data from the 2011 Census and remote-sensing instruments, for people in India’s 640 districts.

In 2017, they produced a ‘heat-wave vulnerability’ ranking in the journal Environmental Research and Public Health. It identified 10 districts as being at ‘very high risk’ and 97 at ‘high risk’. Most of these districts were located in central India, in the states of Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. They also found that urban areas fared better than rural areas on average. More importantly, their paper noted that lack of sanitation and awareness of best sanitary practices, lack of facilities within households, low literacy and poor or no access to water had hands in worsening the impact of heat.

If this is true, then it is easy to see how much of India is already in grave danger.

G.B.S.N.P. Varma is a freelance journalist.

Low-Income Neighbourhoods Are More Vulnerable to Heatwave Spells

Climate-smart city designs should help alleviate the plight of people in densely built, low-income neighbourhoods, with no open green spaces that remain unsheltered from heat even at night.

As India stares at one of the longest heatwaves in three decades, which so far has claimed over 200 lives, experts warn that the spell will impact people in poor urban neighbourhoods for weeks after the scorcher is over.

In a study published in the journal Science of the Total Environment in April 2019, researchers mapped and compared exposure to heat between low-income and other neighbourhoods in Delhi (India), Dhaka (Bangladesh) and Faisalabad (Pakistan).

While high and low-income neighbourhoods both have heat going up during the day, one’s ability to afford air conditioning (AC), avoid strenuous activities outdoors and presence of shade make a difference in coping with the heat exposure, said co-author Christian Siderius of the Wageningen University and Research (WUR).

But people in densely built, low-income neighbourhoods, with no open green spaces, remain unsheltered from heat even at night. Because, at night, these neighbourhoods, tend to trap the heat of the day and stay warmer.

“And due to a combination of factors when the heatwave is over, poor people will be exposed to extremely high night-time temperatures for many more weeks or even months,” said Siderius, adding that this creates an ongoing health risk.

Instead of just tracking urban heat island or air temperature, researchers assessed the exposure to heat in outdoor microclimatic conditions in terms of thermal indices. They advocated that heat action plans (HAP) be based on thermal indices so as to include factors such as humidity, not just temperature thresholds.

Heat is more than just high temperature and it is influenced by several other factors such as humidity, wind, direct or indirect radiation from the sun and indices take into account these factors and give an idea of how hot one really feels.

“Cities are hotter than rural areas around them (we see differences of up to eight degrees Celsius), especially at night. In dense urban areas where the poor live it is even more so. Then they don’t have AC or well-insulated houses so they can’t escape the heat,” said Siderius, also associated with London School of Economics (at the Grantham Research Institute).

“And finally, while temperatures go down a bit with the onset of the monsoon, humidity increases which means heat indices generally stay high. So it’s not so much an emergency situation, but more of an ongoing health risk,” he said.

Also read: Bihar’s Killer Heat Wave: Deaths Toll Rises to 142, Over a Thousand Hospitalised

Hem Dholakia of Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW), who was not associated with the study, agreed about the increased impact of heat in poorer urban areas.

“Let us say that a poor person living in a tin shed, with little or no ventilation, experiences, on an average, a temperature that is two degrees higher indoors, than the outside temperatures. On a heatwave day, when the outside temperature is 41 degrees Celsius, this person is exposed to a temperature of nearly 43 degrees Celsius,” Dholakia elaborated.

“Once the outside temperature drops to 38 degrees (i.e. the heat wave has passed) the person may still experience 40 degrees indoors. Thus, the exposure for the poor may be prolonged based on housing characteristics. This will drive health impacts,” Dholakia told Mongabay-India.

Additionally, differences in heat exposure mostly depended on where in the city, slums or low-income neighbourhoods are situated.

For example, in Delhi, which recorded its highest ever June temperature, 48 degree Celsius, and where urban parts cover roughly half the total city area of 1500  square kilometres, poor neighbourhoods tend to be found all over the city and also close to the centre of the city.

“Here the influence of all the surrounding concrete, which cools down slowly during the night, is highest. In Pakistan’s third largest city of Faisalabad, poor neighbourhoods are now developing on the outskirts of the city, close to agricultural fields which cool down quicker at night which influences the outdoor temperature to some extent,” Siderius said. In Dhaka, in some slum areas close to water, which – if it flows – can cool down temperatures a bit.

India is experiencing one of the worst heatwave spells in the last several decades. Photo: NASA Earth Observatory image by Joshua Stevens, using GEOS-5 data from the Global Modeling and Assimilation Office at NASA GSFC.

Heatwave spells are increasing in India

According to the India Meteorological Department, a heat wave is declared if the maximum temperature at a recording station reaches at least 40 degree Celsius or more for plains, 37 degree Celsius or more for coastal stations and at least 30 degree Celsius or more for hilly regions.

As per the IMD, the frequency of severe heat waves has increased sharply in the past 15 years due to factors like climate change and urban heat island, a phenomenon where a city experiences a higher temperature than its surrounding rural areas.

Also read: India Burning: Five Die as Heat Wave Grips Large Parts of the Country

The National Disaster Management Authority’s 2016 guidelines on preparation of heat action plan (HAP) states if the maximum temperature of any place continues to be more than 45 degrees Celsius consecutively for two days, it is called a heat wave condition.

This year in Churu in the state of Rajasthan, the maximum temperature hovered near 51 degree Celsius for three days. States such as Gujarat, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh and Odisha are also under the heatwave’s grip. Meanwhile in Bihar, over 150 people this year have succumbed to the heatwave, including 90 in four days alone (June 15-18, 2019).

Madhavan Nair Rajeevan, who is the secretary of the Union Ministry of Earth Sciences, told Mongabay-India that the present episode is one of the worst heatwave spells and stressed that heatwave spells are increasing over India.

Mahesh Palawat, who is the chief meteorologist with the private weather forecaster Skymet Weather dubbed it as one of the longest heatwave spells in the past few decades. “Due to continuous dry weather and absence of any pre-monsoon activity, the temperatures increased,” said Palawat.

“65.39% of the population (nearly two thirds) was exposed to high temperatures of over 40 degree Celsius in the country on June 10, 2019. 37% was exposed to the temperature for more than 10 hours in a day. With many weather stations recording their highest ever temperature in June, this could be one of the worst heatwaves the country has ever faced. The failure of the northeast monsoon, the pre-monsoon showers, cyclone Vayu, and the delayed onset (and progress) of monsoon have been the primary reasons behind the excessive heat during June,” Raj Bhagat Palanichamy, who is senior project associate at WRI India Sustainable Cities, told Mongabay-India.

“The massive crop fire incidents during the month of May made the situation worse as people were left exposed to higher temperatures. Satellite data indicate that around 57% of the population was exposed to higher temperatures between May 25 and June 6. Such massive exposures to extreme heat conditions could be having an immense effect on the health of the population, particularly among the weaker sections of the society,” said Palanichamy.

If the record of the past few years is to be considered, the rise in global temperature is not slowing any time soon. As per independent analyses by NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), earth’s global surface temperature in 2018 was the fourth warmest since 1880 and the past five years are, collectively, the warmest years in the modern record.

According to a CEEW study, a 1.5 to 2 degrees Celsius rise in global average temperatures (above pre-industrial level) will lead to non-linear increases in mortality risks across Indian cities.

Nearly two-thirds of India’s population was exposed to high temperatures of over 40 degrees on 10th June 2019.
Data: GFS Temperature Estimates, GPWv4, MODIS (LPDAAC – NASA);
Processed by Raj Bhagat Palanichamy using Google Earth Engine.

Heat indices for heat action

Extreme heat can lead to dangerous, even deadly, health consequences, including heat stress and heatstroke. From 1992 to 2015, heatwaves have resulted in 22,562 deaths across India.

The western Indian city of Ahmedabad in Gujarat became the first south Asian city to prepare a heat wave action plan (HAP) in 2013 following the 2010 heat wave that claimed 1,344 lives.

Since its rollout, the plan has prevented about 1,100 deaths each year in Ahmedabad. The plan has been adopted by at least a dozen cities in the country. To activate the plan, colour coded heat alerts are issued based on temperature thresholds determined by the city’s civic body.

But experts argue that temperature thresholds are not enough because the observed health impacts from heat exposure are due to the combination temperature as well as humidity.

Also read: In Rush to Fight Global Heating, Let’s Not Forget the Overexploitation Disaster

Dholakia said studies, like this one, from 2010, which compared heat indices to evaluate public health risk, for New York City, found that the heat index is more reliable in predicting deaths related heat as compared to a single variable such as minimum, average or maximum temperature.

While so far efforts have been directed on developing heat action plans in cities where temperatures reach the high forties (such as Ahmedabad and Nagpur), coastal cities should also have their own HAPs.

“Using the heat index approach, we find people living in cities within India with high humidity ( coastal cities like Mumbai, Chennai) and temperatures that typically reach the high thirties may also be vulnerable to heat health impacts,” Dholakia said.

In fact, as per NDMA guidelines on managing heat exposure, a mix of low temperature with high humidity and high temperature with low humidity can trigger similar levels of heat stress. So 43 degrees Celsius and 40% humidity or 33 degrees and 95% humidity can trigger similar levels of heat stress.

Suresh Rathi of Indian Institute of Public Health, Hyderabad said the city of Surat in Gujarat, which has a considerable migrant population living in informal settlements, has come out with its HAP incorporating heat index.

“Our research on Surat has shown that there is an increase in night-time temperatures (by 3.7 degree Celsius in 30 years and the humidity levels throughout the year does not go below 60%,” Rathi said, stressing that heat index is more important than temperature threshold for Surat city.

“For Surat when we calculate heat-associated deaths then the number of deaths goes up by six per day if we take into account the heat index (when relative humidity is factored with the actual air temperature) in contrast to just considering temperature,” Rathi told Mongabay-India.

Further, the combination of high relative humidity and temperature also creates a favourable condition for mosquitoes to flourish. “This is more dangerous for slums where water is stored for longer periods of time,” Rathi said, adding the IMD is also discussing heat index.

Rohit Magotra, Deputy Director of Integrated Research for Action and Development (IRADe) that is working with three Indian cities (Delhi, Rajkot and Bhubaneshwar) to develop Climate Adaptive Heat Stress Action Plans (HSAPs), said the plans take into account the variation of temperature within cities themselves to chalk out thermal hotspots.

“Using satellite imageries we generated brightness maps (indicating reflectivity of surfaces) to highlight thermal hotspots. Using thermal hotspot maps, survey (of households) hotspots were delineated in each city, marking the slums and squatter settlements. Surveys captured the exposure, vulnerability and impact of heat stress on specific occupations such as street hawkers or vendors, construction workers, traffic police and others,” Magotra told Mongabay-India.

The plans are also gender-sensitive as they take into account specific concerns voiced by women which would help in better communication, said Magotra.

Also read: The Subtle Seduction of the ‘Warm’ in Global Warming

Underlining the study finding that heat stress thresholds are exceeded for months on end in Delhi, Dhaka, and Faisalabad, paper co-author Tanya Singh said one needs to plan in advance for heat exposure because people are also more vulnerable at the start of the heat season or heatwave as they are not acclimatised to it.

“Especially, when it starts getting warmer suddenly after winter. Also, it’s not only on a heatwave day, particularly, that people die, but it’s also on moderately hot days as well. You have more moderate hot days compared to extremely hot days so the population affected is higher on those days. But the focus is so much more on heatwaves,” Singh, associated with WUR and student at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told Mongabay-India.

Low income communities more vulnerable to the impact of the heatwave. Photo: Ankur Jain/Wikimedia Commons.

A window of opportunity for climate-smart cities

The authors suggest that climate-smart city design can help alleviate the burden of a rise in temperature due to climate change.

“Neighbourhoods, and not only the rich ones, should be designed such that they provide shading during the day, but also be intersected or embedded in open green spaces to provide cooling during the night,” they write in the study.

Siderius and colleagues argue that development challenges provide a window of opportunity in the region, as much of South Asia’s infrastructure of the future still needs to be built. There is a choice, to build it, climate-smart. Though Indian summers have always been hot and there have always been poor that coped, one needs to consider that climate has already warmed over the past decennia, and in the past cities weren’t this big and so urbanised.

“Another aspect which we have not touched upon – and which has changed a lot over the past decades – is the combination of air pollution and heat. Being (too) hot and breathing polluted air is a health risk, especially for vulnerable groups,” he said.

Rejeet Mathews, who is the head of urban development at World Resources Institute, India Ross Center for Sustainable Cities, pointed out that urbanisation is not moving in a sustainable way.

“Urbanisation in terms of the construction of buildings, roads and pavements is increasing rapidly in India’s cities. This pace of growth does not spare environmentally sensitive areas such as flood plains, shallow lake beds, tree clusters and results in the overall loss of green cover. Concretisation and the increasing amounts of dry, impervious surfaces exacerbate the urban heat island effect, where temperatures are typically a few degrees hotter than surrounding rural areas,” Mathews told Mongabay-India.

For instance, in Bengaluru, about 85% of the floodplains of the city, is built on. This pattern of urbanisation is definitely causing a hotter microclimate, pointed out Mathews.

Mathews also stressed on the importance of considering traditional knowledge in modern constructions as cities lose green cover.

Also read: The Social Consequences of India’s Heat Waves Spell Doom for the Working Poor

“Considering India will continue to face the brunt of such heat waves and related health and death toll, the microclimate needs to be made more livable and thermally comfortable by using traditional techniques, principles of climatic design and other extreme heat adaptation measures. This applies to both buildings as well as external living spaces and is critical to the more vulnerable lower income groups who do not have the capacity to go out and buy air conditioners and coolers,” she emphasised.

Mathews suggested that tree-lined streets and public parks, rainwater harvesting, water holding ponds, and public drinking water points are some of the measures that need to be adopted in external living spaces.

“Buildings should be oriented in ways that living spaces receive the least amount of heat loads from solar radiation avoiding west and southwest directions where non-habitable rooms such as staircases, storerooms etc. could be placed. Further, building envelopes need to be better designed to ensure mutual shading, buffer verandas, extended shading of openings among other techniques, many of which are forgotten traditional practices,” she added.

This article was first published on Mongabay. Read the original here.

Severe Heatwave Claims 44 Lives in Bihar

The state government on Saturday said all schools in Patna city would remain closed till June 19 given the prevailing weather conditions.

Patna: The officials at the Disaster Management Control Room said 22 people died in Aurangabad, 20 in Gaya and two in Nawada districts due to the heatwave.

Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has expressed grief over the deaths due to the “loo” winds and the heatstroke in the three districts and has announced a payment of Rs four lakh as ex-gratia to the next of kin of those killed, an official release said.

Stating that the government stood firmly with the affected families, Kumar ordered payment of Rs four lakh as ex-gratia from the state disaster relief fund to the next of kin of those killed due to the heatwave in the three districts.

He also directed the officials concerned to take necessary steps and measures in dealing with the blistering heat and loo.

The chief minister also asked the officials to provide all medical help to those affected by the heatstroke.

Major cities such as Patna, Gaya and Bhagalpur witnessed the heatwave on Saturday.

According to the Patna Meteorological Centre, the state capital registered a maximum temperature of 45.8 degrees Celsius on Saturday, the highest in June in the last ten years, while Gaya and Bhagalpur recorded a high of 45.2 and 41.5 degrees Celsius respectively.

Also read: India Burning: Five Die as Heat Wave Grips Large Parts of the Country

A heatwave is declared when the maximum temperature is 4.5 degrees Celsius above normal for two consecutive days, a MeT official said.

Saturday’s maximum temperatures recorded in Patna, Gaya and Bhagalpur were 9.2 degrees, 7.6 degrees and 5.5 degrees Celsius above normal respectively.

The MeT department has forecast that the heatwave will continue in these three cities on Sunday too.

The state government on Saturday said all schools in Patna city would remain closed till June 19 given the prevailing weather conditions.

Patna District Magistrate (DM) Kumar Ravi said all government and private schools in the state capital would remain shut till June 19 due to a persisting heatwave-like condition for the past several days, an official release said.

This is the second time the district administration has extended the suspension of academic activities in schools due to the weather.

Watch | India Burning: Heat Wave Grips Large Parts Of The Country

Explaining the heat wave in the country.

Globally, eight Indian cities were among the 15 hottest places around the world, according to the weather website El Dorado. The other seven were in neighbouring Pakistan with Jacobabad in Sindh recording a high of 51.1° Celsius.

On June 3, Churu in Rajasthan was the hottest city in the country with a maximum recorded temperature of 49.8° Celsius, followed closely by Sri Ganganagar – also in Rajasthan – at 48.6° Celsius, according to the private weather forecaster Skymet.

India Burning: Five Die as Heat Wave Grips Large Parts of the Country

According to IMD, the heatwave scenario is likely to continue over northwest, central and peninsular India over the next two days.

New Delhi: Severe heat wave conditions are prevailing over half of India with temperatures soaring to upward of 45° Celsius across large swathes of the country. Above normal temperatures are prevailing from the northern states of Jammu and Kashmir and even in the hill states of Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand to the southern states of Telangana and Karnataka.

A farmer and two policemen lost their lives in Rajasthan on Sunday due to a heat stroke. Two people also died in Sabarkantha and Rajkot districts of Gujarat.

Credit: PTI/Kamal Kishore

On June 3, Churu in Rajasthan was the hottest city in the country with a maximum recorded temperature of 49.8° Celsius, followed closely by Sri Ganganagar – also in Rajasthan – at 48.6° Celsius, according to the private weather forecaster Skymet. In fact, seven of the top ten cities with maximum temperatures were in Rajasthan.

Globally, eight Indian cities were among the 15 hottest places around the world, according to the weather website El Dorado. The other seven were in neighbouring Pakistan with Jacobabad in Sindh recording a high of 51.1° Celsius.

The heatwave scenario is likely to continue over northwest, central and the adjoining peninsular India over the next two days according to the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD).

“There is unlikely to be any major relief from the heat in the coming days particularly over north west India, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh. Parts of south India could see relief after the monsoon hits Kerala on June 6. But, other parts of the country will have to brave the situation,” Anand Sharma, deputy director general at IMD, told The Wire.

The IMD considers declaring a heatwave only if temperatures exceed 40° Celsius in the plains, 37° Celsius in coastal regions and 30° Celsius in the hills. Thereafter, if the departure from normal temperature is between 4.5°celsius and 6.4° Celsius or the actual maximum temperature exceeds 45° Celsius for two consecutive days, a heatwave is declared. A severe heatwave is declared if the departure from normal is greater than 6.4° Celsius or the actual maximum temperature is more than 47° Celsius.

A monkey drinks water from a tap in Jammu on May 31, 2019. Credit: PTI

In the next couple of days, there is likely to be minor relief in parts of Punjab, west Uttar Pradesh and Delhi due to a change in wind direction which could bring down temperatures by  2 to 3 degrees. The drop in temperature, however, is likely to be offset by an increase in humidity which will ensure that the discomfort levels remain quite extreme.

High humidity levels are particularly dangerous because the human body’s natural cooling process of sweating is impeded due to high levels of moisture in the air. Our body cools through the process of sweating. As the sweat evaporates off our skin, it takes some of the excess heat with it.

At high levels of humidity coupled with high temperatures, sweat continues to be produced but its evaporation is reduced. This in turn reduces the cooling effect on the body.

A 2018 report of the National Institute of Disaster Management revealed that 22,562 persons lost their lives due to heat waves in India between 1992 and 2015.

A recent paper by P. Rohini, M Rajeevan and A.K. Srivastava, found that in central and north west India heat waves are occurring more frequently and for longer durations. “This warming trend is likely to continue in future climate in view of increasing greenhouse gases,” the authors noted in the summary.

Rajeevan, who is the secretary of ministry of earth sciences, has also emphasised how global warming is causing changes in the climate conditions and extreme weather events.

“Temperatures are increasing during both day and night time. Heat waves are increasing in frequency as well as magnitude. Extreme rainfall and rainstorms which can cause floods are increasing. Dry spell duration is also increasing,” he told the Indian Express in January this year.

A man bathes in a tube we’ll to beat the heat in Amritsar on June 1, 2019. Credit: PTI

High night time temperatures

In the last few days, large parts of north west, central and peninsular India have also seen unusually high minimum temperatures. The mercury did not dip below 35° Celsius in Rajasthan’s Phalodi – a departure of almost 9° Celsius from the average.

In several other stations too, the minimum temperatures recorded were greater than 30° Celsius – between 3 and 5 degrees above normal in most cases.

Abnormally hot night time temperatures can cause extreme heat stress during a heat wave. Cooler night temperatures provide relief from the high day time temperatures. In the absence of cool night time temperatures, we have simultaneous high day and night temperatures due to which the discomfort increases and becomes a potential health risk.

A study by Saurav Mukherjee and Vimal Mishra at the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar published in November 2018, found that the occurrence of concurrent day and night heat waves extending for more than three days have shown an increasing trend in western, north-eastern and southern India post 1984.

It also found that if global mean temperature rise is limited to 2°Celsius above pre-industrial levels – as envisaged by the Paris climate agreement – concurrent day and night heat waves could go up six-fold in India.

Half the country reeling under drought

What makes matters worse is that about 46% of the land area in India is reeling under drought conditions, according to IIT Gandhinagar’s drought early warning system, a real time drought monitoring tool. 26% of the country is under either the extremely dry or exceptionally dry categories.

Large parts of Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Gujarat, Jharkhand, Rajasthan and the Northeast have particularly severely hit by the drought.

Young boys take a dip in the Narmada river to cool off in Jabalpur, on June 2, 2019. Credit: PTI/Kamal Kishore

The problem has been ongoing since the south west monsoon of 2018 saw a 9.4% deficit in rainfall. In all,  252 of the 727 districts in the country recorded deficient rainfall according to a response by the government in the Lok Sabha in February 2019.

Subsequently, the north-east monsoon, or the retreating monsoon during the months of October and November, also underperformed. It was deficient by 44%.

The pre-monsoon rains between March and May this year have also been deficient by 25% – the second driest since 1965.

Things could get worse as the south west monsoon of 2019 could also underwhelm. According to the IMD, there is a 47% probability of a below average monsoon in 2019. The areas where the deficits could be highest are north west India and north east India.

Skymet, on the other hand, has forecasted a 60% chance of a below normal rainfall. It has contended that east and central India could see deficient monsoons and the month of June would see only 77% of average rainfall.