The Hindu (Delhi)

Indian cities are ‘ heat traps’ that make summers worse: o cial

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Indian cities have become "heat traps" due to their unbalanced growth devouring water bodies and increasing greenhouse emissions, a senior government oficial said on June 17, as a scorching summer killed dozens in some parts of the country.

The India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) has forecast above-normal temperatur­es for June in the northwest and central parts of the country including Delhi, making it one of the longest heatwave spells.

The highest daily temperatur­es in the capital have stayed above 40 degrees Celsius since May 12 and are forecast to fall below that mark only on June 26. The IMD's heatwave criteria start with 40 degrees in the plains and 30 degrees for hills where it is generally cooler because of elevation.

Delhi, which is also facing a water shortage, recorded about 44 degrees late Monday afternoon but the IMD said it felt like 49.2 degrees.

"Climate change plays an important role," Krishna S. Vatsa, a member of the National Disaster Management Authority, told Reuters.

Unbalanced urban growth, which has reduced wetlands and water bodies, was another factor, Mr. Vatsa said.

"The emission of greenhouse gases has gone up. The permeable spaces have gone down considerab­ly. The cities actually have become heat traps."

As a result, he said, nights are nearly as uncomforta­ble as days.

Above-normal temperatur­es have been forecast for June in the northwest and central parts of the country, including Delhi, making it one of the longest heatwave spells

According to a study by the Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE) published last month, land surface temperatur­es during summers from 2001 to 2010 in cities such as Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Mumbai used to drop by up to 13.2 degrees C during the night from their day-time peak.

Between 2014 and 2023 they were only cooling ofi by up to 11.5 degrees C.

"Hot nights are as dangerous as mid-day peak temperatur­es," the Centre's report said. "People get little chance to recover from day-time heat if temperatur­es remain high overnight."

Vatsa said most Indian states were implementi­ng heat action plans that include provisioni­ng drinking water and better medical facilities, as well as rescheduli­ng outdoor work and school vacations.

But Anumita Roychowdhu­ry, CSE's executive director, said there was no clear mandate to implement long-term strategies.

Delhi's long-term plan includes increasing heat insulation of buildings, developing shelters for urban poor and slum dwellers, and investing in cooling water bodies.

Such plans need to be backed ™nancially, said Vishwas Chitale of the Council on Energy, Environmen­t and Water, a think-tank in New Delhi.

"Cities are struggling with their own ™nance and they don't have additional budgets to implement actions for heat," he added.

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 ?? AP ?? A woman in Guwahati, Assam, on May 25. Heat wave conditions across India make this a summer no one will forget in a hurry.
AP A woman in Guwahati, Assam, on May 25. Heat wave conditions across India make this a summer no one will forget in a hurry.

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