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regular-article-logo Friday, 26 April 2024

Storm watch: Cyclone season in India

Laws are mostly silent on the rights and rehabilitation of climate refugees even though annually nearly 1.5 million people are displaced internally

The Editorial Board Published 21.05.21, 01:08 AM
Dark clouds cover the sky during cyclone Tauktae at Vellayil Harbor in Kozhikode, Monday, May 17, 2021.

Dark clouds cover the sky during cyclone Tauktae at Vellayil Harbor in Kozhikode, Monday, May 17, 2021. PTI

India, as is the case with the world, is headed towards stormy weather. This is because climate change is turning oceans hotter, increasing the frequency of cyclones. Tauktae, categorized as an extremely severe cyclonic storm, has caused extensive losses to life and property in stretches of India’s western coast, especially in Gujarat. Meanwhile, on the eastern coast, coastal Bengal is still counting its losses one year after being lashed by Cyclone Amphan. Worse, Yaas, another cyclonic formation, has been spotted on the radar. Yet another natural calamity at the time of a pandemic is expected to further stretch a besieged administration.

Neither Bengal nor India is a stranger to cyclones. What is discernible is the increase in their frequency in recent years. This is consistent with scientific predictions that have warned of a rise in cyclonic activity, including wind velocity and an intensification of tidal surges, around the world. Changing climate and the global inertia to arrest the rise in temperatures are the catalysts here. Significantly, the administrative response to extreme weather remains reactive. This means that at the level of policy, there is a disproportionate emphasis on the distribution of relief and on rebuilding rather than on minimizing the damage through prudent preparedness. Admittedly, there has been some improvement in the technology used to predict weather patterns as well as in the construction of storm shelters. What is missing, however, is the transformation of physical assets — buildings, transportation networks, even land and agricultural practices — into climate resilient edifices in vulnerable areas. There is also a need to raise efficient, dedicated, local civic cadre to undertake relief work. This force can complement the rehabilitation undertaken by the administration that may not be fleet-footed. Wisdom, unfortunately, remains on paper. In 2016, Calcutta had become the first Indian city to create a road map to move towards a climate-resilient, low carbon future. It would be interesting to see how much of the plan has made its way from bureaucratic files to reality. Some other aspects of climate-change-induced disasters remain unaddressed. Indian laws are mostly silent on the rights and rehabilitation of climate refugees even though it has been estimated that annually nearly 1.5 million people are displaced internally on account of extreme weather related events. This burgeoning constituency demands urgent attention from India’s executive and judicial fraternities since some of the major consequences of climate change — be they cyclones or floods — have begun to manifest themselves with an alarming frequency.

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