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photo-article-logo Tuesday, 01 July 2025

Where the sun shows no mercy: Inside the daily struggles of India’s hottest region

The villages around Sri Ganganagar become largely deserted between midday and late afternoon, with people retreating indoors

Mujib Mashal, Hari Kumar, Anindito Mukherjee Published 01.07.25, 07:14 PM

The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods. Medical services become bogged down. Economic output suffers.

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A masonry laborer drinks water while working in Rajasthan, India, June 11, 2025. The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods, medical services become bogged down and economic output suffers. (Anindito Mukherjee/The New York Times) A woman receives nebulizer treatment at a health center after her asthma was aggravated due to heat exposure in Rajasthan, India, June 12, 2025. The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods, medical services become bogged down and economic output suffers. (Anindito Mukherjee/ The New York Times)
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For many Indians, there is no true escape from the heat. Air conditioning is an impossible dream. Work is done outside, under the sun, and not to work means not to eat.

In the face of those realities, the daily rhythms of life are changing in India, the most populous country on a continent that is warming at a rate twice as fast as the global average.

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People signal to offer water to commuters traveling during peak hours of the heatwave in Rajasthan, India, June 11, 2025. The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods, medical services become bogged down and economic output suffers. (Anindito Mukherjee/The New York Times)

We witnessed these new routines when we spent a day in June in Sri Ganganagar, a region in the desert state of Rajasthan that was the hottest place in the country in mid-June.

The temperature on the day of our visit peaked at 47 degrees Celsius, or 117 degrees Fahrenheit. The next day was even worse: 49 degrees Celsius, or 121 degrees Fahrenheit. Relative humidity that has been rising over the past decade compounded the misery.

Still, life carried on.

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Farm workers begin in the early morning hours to avoid the harsh afternoon sun amid the ongoing heatwave in Rajasthan, India, June 12, 2025. The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods, medical services become bogged down and economic output suffers. (Anindito Mukherjee/The New York Times)

6 a.m., 30 Celsius, 86 Fahrenheit

Work in the fields and on construction sites begins early, even before dawn, to catch as many cooler hours as possible.

Kulwinder Singh and his son Gurveer were out weeding their cotton field. Gurveer then helped his mother prepare food for the cattle.

His sister folded the sheets from simple woven beds in the courtyard, where the family sleeps at night to seek some respite in the breeze.

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Commuters receive drinks offered by volunteers during peak hours of the heatwave in Rajasthan, India, June 11, 2025. The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods, medical services become bogged down and economic output suffers. (Anindito Mukherjee/The New York Times)

9 a.m., 36 Celsius, 97 Fahrenheit

As temperatures started climbing, a canal on the edge of a village in the district was growing busy, as children jumped in to cool off.

Anmol Varma, 16, who works at a car accessories shop, said he made several visits to the canal. “All day,” he said.

10 a.m., 40 Celsius, 104 Fahrenheit

By midmorning, conditions were getting tough for laborers doing cement work at a construction site. They stop their work only during the day’s hottest hours, from around noon to the early afternoon.

“We just drink more water,” said Nihal Chand, 55, one of the workers. “If we feel the heat, we go under that tree to cool off for a bit. But it’s hot there too — it’s not like there is air conditioning there.”

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A child takes cools down in the waters of a canal during the ongoing heatwave in Rajasthan, India, June 11, 2025. The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods, medical services become bogged down and economic output suffers. (Anindito Mukherjee/The New York Times)

11 a.m., 42 Celsius, 108 Fahrenheit

As temperatures kept climbing, the flow of patients at the government health clinic in the village of Chak Maharaj Ka increased.

Dr. Purnima Bishnoi, who manages the center, said villagers were by now well practiced in reducing the heat’s impact, avoiding the hottest hours outside and stocking rehydration remedies.

Many patients, including Baljinder Kaur, have preexisting conditions that are aggravated by the rising heat.

Kaur, 75, is asthmatic. But she was complaining of stomach pain and diarrhea. After getting medicine and being treated with a nebulizer, she left for home with her husband and grandson.

Noon, 43 Celsius, 109 Fahrenheit

By noon, the laborers at the construction site had paused their plastering of a wall. But there wasn’t much relief as they cooked their lunch under the baking sun.

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A masonry laborer drinks water while working in Rajasthan, India, June 11, 2025. The unbearable temperatures that arrive every summer in India are a threat to lives and livelihoods, medical services become bogged down and economic output suffers. (Anindito Mukherjee/The New York Times)

The villages around Sri Ganganagar become largely deserted between midday and late afternoon, with people retreating indoors.

But that was less of an option in the city proper. Roadside carts remained open, and construction work continued in the blistering heat. The fire department tried to cool off the streets by spraying water, and volunteers ran water stands.

“The main thing is the laborers and people who work outside,” said Dr. Deepak Monga, who leads the city’s main hospital. “They continue their work, because otherwise, they die of hunger.”

3 p.m., 47 Celsius, 117 Fahrenheit

The temperature peaked at 47 degrees Celsius (117 Fahrenheit) around 3 p.m. and remained there for a couple of hours.

On the highway leading to the village of Chak Maharaj Ka, one family was busy rushing cups of water to travelers.

Half of the family members filled buckets and glasses, while the other half rushed to stop red-eyed motorcycle riders, truck drivers and travelers passing through the area. Two women rinsed the cups between every run.

The family, who come out every afternoon during the hottest hours, described their offering of water as charity in a society that sees good deeds as central to salvation.

“This is the only thing that goes with you,” said Bhupender Suliya, 20, who was rushing water. “Nothing else.”

6 p.m., 42 Celsius, 108 Fahrenheit

People started trickling outside again by early evening, as the temperatures began to inch down.

Shops in the village market reopened, and elders pulled out their chairs and congregated for chats. On the farms, work resumed.

7:30 p.m., 37 Celsius, 99 Fahrenheit

After sunset at 7:35, the temperature continued its downward trend. Children were still jumping into the canal to cool off.

Gurmail Singh and his family, including grandchildren visiting from New Zealand, spent their evening outside and prepared their beds in the courtyard. But he lamented that the nights remained warm.

“Who can fall asleep in this heat?” Singh said.

New York Times News Service

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