Concrete fever: On India and heat management
India must mandate green cover and reflective materials for its cities
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Context
With temperatures reaching 48°C in parts of India, this editorial analyzes the factors exacerbating heatwaves beyond global emissions. It highlights the 'urban heat island' effect caused by concretization and the increased vulnerability of informal sector workers, calling for urgent structural and policy interventions in urban design and labor enforcement.
UPSC Perspectives
Geographical
The editorial highlights a critical geographical concept: the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect. This occurs when urban areas experience significantly higher temperatures (often 2°C to 10°C hotter, as noted in the article) than surrounding rural regions. This phenomenon is driven by the replacement of natural land cover with dense concentrations of pavement, buildings, and other surfaces that absorb and retain heat (like asphalt and concrete). The article notes how this, combined with the loss of tree cover and waste heat from air conditioners, creates micro-climates that are uniquely lethal. From a UPSC perspective, understanding the Core Heatwave Zone (central, northwestern, and eastern coastal regions) is crucial for geography. The data showing increased frequency and duration of heatwaves underscores the need to differentiate between broader climate change and localized UHI impacts, as mitigation strategies differ for each.
Governance
The governance challenge highlighted is the failure to adapt urban planning and enforce existing regulations in the face of rising temperatures. The author criticizes the reliance on 'technological fixes' like air conditioning, which paradoxically fuel the problem through thermodynamic waste heat and increased energy demand, often met by fossil fuels. Effective governance requires implementing structural changes: enforcing building codes adapted to the new climate reality, mandating reflective materials, and increasing green cover. Crucially, the editorial points to a significant policy gap: India lacks dedicated budget heads for heat management at the national level. The has issued guidelines for heatwave action plans, but implementation at the municipal level remains weak. The UPSC often asks about the role of local bodies and urban planning in disaster resilience, making this a key area for Disaster Management.
Social
The social impact of heatwaves is profoundly unequal, disproportionately affecting the informal workforce and marginalized communities. While privileged office workers can rely on air conditioning, outdoor laborers, construction workers, and street vendors are exposed directly to lethal conditions. The editorial emphasizes the urgent need to enforce existing labor laws, such as those under the , which technically provide provisions for worker safety but are frequently violated. These laws require halting outdoor work when the heat index (a measure of how hot it feels when relative humidity is factored in with actual air temperature) reaches unsafe thresholds. This highlights a critical intersection of climate change and labor rights. For UPSC, this connects to the broader theme of 'climate justice' and the vulnerabilities of the informal sector in (Society) and (Economy/Employment).