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Climate
Changes & Impending Calamities
India, Watch
Out!
Global Warming is adversely affecting
the climatic changes, and is the
area of major concern worldwide.
It is extensively contributing to
ecological imbalances of the environment.
For instance, changes in India's
annual monsoon patterns are expected
to result in severe droughts and
heavy floods in parts of the country.
Scientists predict that by the end
of the 21st century, the country
will experience a 3 to 5 degrees
Celsius increase in temperature
and a 20 percent rise in monsoon
rainfall.
As part of the UK-India Education
and Research Initiative (UKIERI),
Liverpool, Indian scientists have
been granted £150,000 to develop
key research methodologies and scientific
monitoring procedures to investigate
how alterations in water resources
may affect human health, agriculture,
forest wealth and wildlife.
Climate change studies undertaken
so far reveal that action is essential
in order to prevent long term damage
to India's water cycle. The livelihood
of a vast population in India depends
on agriculture, forestry, wetlands
and fisheries and land use in these
areas is strongly influenced by
water-based ecosystems that depend
on monsoon rains.
Changes in the water cycle may also
cause an increase in water borne
diseases such as cholera and hepatitis,
as well as diseases carried by insects
such as malaria.
Recent evidence of the unpredictability
of monsoons and the unusual distribution
of rainfall has led to questions
whether such changes are a result
of global warming.
The potential impact of global warming
on the monsoon in India is of serious
concern, particularly with respect
to agriculture, much of which is
rain fed. Indeed, nearly 80 per
cent of the country's water resources
go to meet agricultural needs.
Recent evidence of the unpredictability
of monsoons, the unusual distribution
of rainfall in space and time, the
shifting patterns of precipitation,
the sustained deficit rainfall and
drought-like conditions in some
regions and excessive rainfall in
others have led experts to ask whether
we are already witnessing permanent
or quasi-permanent changes in monsoon
behaviour as a result of global
warming.
Some studies on long-term trends
indicate that while there is no
evidence of any change in the rainfall
pattern in the gross scale of the
country, changes are discernible
at smaller scales of space and time.
As J. Srinivasan of the Indian Institute
of Science (IISc), Bangalore, has
pointed out, the monsoon has so
far been a stable phenomenon but
the impact of climate change could
be different.
So, are we seeing the effects
of global warming already? How will
these apparent changes evolve well
into the 21st century as long-term
climate change becomes real?
According to Srinivasan, simulations
with climate models and observations
indicate that rainfall extremes
such as the Mumbai deluge of 2005
could become more frequent in India
under the impact of climate change.
Both 2005 and 2006 had spells of
excessive rainfall that normally
would have occurred once in a hundred
years or so.
Using a state-of-the-art Regional
Climate Model (RCM) of the British
Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction
and Research, called PRECIS, scientists
of the Indian Institute of Tropical
Meteorology (IITM), Pune, recently
obtained high-resolution meteorological
effects of climate change for India
on the basis of the appropriate
greenhouse gas (GHG) emission scenarios
outlined in the TAR. The study finds
a general increase in precipitation
and surface air temperature (SAT)
for the country as a whole for the
period 2071-2100. The annual mean
increase in SAT ranges from 2 to
5 °C. The warming, though monotonously
widespread across the country, is
more pronounced over northern India.
The all-round warming seen in the
mean is also reflected in the extreme
temperatures, and both nights and
days will get warmer in the future,
notes the study. Interestingly,
night temperatures are seen to be
increasing at a faster rate than
day temperatures.
Spatial rainfall patterns show a
maximum increase over west central
India and the northeastern region.
Extreme precipitation is found to
increase substantially over the
western coast and west central India.
Overall, the summer monsoon rainfall
shows a 20 per cent increase over
the present, and the increase is
seen in all the states except Punjab,
Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu, which
show a slight decrease.
Notwithstanding the limitations
of global climate models (GCMs)
in capturing the finer details of
spatial and temporal variations,
an earlier study based on an atmosphere-ocean-coupled
GCM by Murari Lal of the Indian
Institute of Technology Delhi and
Japanese scientists found that by
the 2080s winter rainfall might
experience a 5 to 25 percent decline
even as monsoon rainfall shows a
10-15 per cent increase.
The changes in the precipitation
pattern will impact significantly
the water resource situation in
the subcontinent, point out R.K.
Mall of the Central Ground Water
Board and others writing in Current
Science. A fall in winter precipitation
implies greater water stress during
a lean summer monsoon season. Secondly,
intense rain occurring during the
summer monsoon months will mean
that much of the monsoon rain would
be lost as direct run-off, leading
to lower groundwater recharging
potential. Groundwater is the chief
source of water to meet the domestic
needs of over 80 percent of the
rural and 50 percent of the urban
populations and also meets the needs
of about 50 percent of irrigated
agriculture.
According to a study of 12 river
basins of the country by A.K. Gosain
of IIT Delhi and others, under a
global warming scenario, there is
a general reduction in the overall
quantity of the available run-off.
The Luni basin with its westward
flowing rivers, Kutch and Saurashtra,
which constitute about one-fourth
of the area of Gujarat and 60 percent
of the area of Rajasthan, will face
situations of acute water scarcity.
River basins of the Mahi, the Pennar,
the Sabarmati and the Tapi will
also face water shortage conditions.
The Cauvery, the Ganga, the Narmada
and the Krishna will experience
seasonal or regular water-stressed
conditions. The basins of the Godavari,
the Brahmani and the Mahanadi will
not have water shortages but will
frequently face severe flood situations.
Fast Melting Himalayan Glaciers
Meltwater from the Himalayan glaciers
and snowmelt from the Himalayan
snow cover feed important rivers
of northern India such as the Ganga
and the Brahmaputra. There is enough
evidence around the world of accentuated
melting of glaciers because of global
warming in the last century, and
the Himalayan glaciers, too, have
been found to be retreating rapidly.
Gangotri, one of the largest glaciers
in the Himalayas, has been receding
at an alarming rate in recent years,
influencing the stream run-off of
Himalayan rivers.
Anil Kulkarni of the Indian Space
Research Organisation's Space Applications
Centre (SAC) in Ahmedabad and other
scientists investigated the glacial
retreat of 466 glaciers in the Chenab,
the Parbati and the Baspa basins
using data from the Indian Remote
Sensing satellite and field expeditions
and comparing them with the 1962
topographic surveys by the Survey
of India. The study has shown an
overall 21 percent reduction in
the glacier surface area. The process
of deglaciation also led to the
fragmentation of the larger glaciers.
The mean area of glacial extent
also declined from 1 sq km to 0.32
sq km during 1962-2004.
Glacial thickness being directly
proportional to the areal extent,
large glaciers (which have thicknesses
between 150 and 600 metres) would
respond to climate change much more
slowly (15 to 60 years) than small
(less than 1 sq km) glaciers (4
to 11 years). So smaller glaciers
and ice fields get more prominently
affected by global warming. This
is already evident in the Himalayan
region. The study found that smaller
glaciers have deglaciated by almost
38 per cent in this 40-year period.
As the world gets into an even warmer
phase in the present century, the
process of deglaciation and fragmentation
will have a profound impact on the
water resources in the Himalayan
region and the Gangetic plains.
Snow Accumulation
The same group of scientists also
investigated the process of snow
accumulation and ablation, which
is highly sensitive to climatic
changes, in the Beas and the Baspa
basins, using remote-sensing data.
Melting of snow cover in summer
is an important source of water
for many Himalayan rivers, and an
increase in atmospheric temperature
accentuates the melting of snow
cover. From a study of winter run-off
- which is only on account of snowmelt
- the scientists found that accumulation
during winter declined between the
late 1990s and the turn of the century.
Also, the snow accumulation pattern
had changed significantly.
Likewise, they found that the winter
run-off had increased by as much
as 75 per cent between 1966 and
1995. If additional areas start
melting in the middle of winter
- this is already happening even
at high altitudes - less snow will
be available for the summertime
stream run-off that feeds the rivers,
the scientists point out. The reduced
sizes of many permanent snow and
ice fields have already led to water
scarcity in villages in Himachal
Pradesh. Though the period of study
is too small to make any definitive
statement about the long-term impact
of warming on snow accumulation
and ablation, the trend would seem
ominous.
Increasing Ferocity of Cyclones
An important effect of global warming
on meteorological conditions is
an increase in sea surface temperature
(SST) in the oceans around the subcontinent.
The resulting greater convective
activity will lead to an increase
in the intensity or wind speed of
cyclones that form in them, particularly
the Bay of Bengal where over 80
percent of the cyclones originate.
Higher wind speeds will also result
in bigger storm surges. The rise
in sea level owing to this regional
meteorological cause will have a
compounding effect on the global
rise in sea level caused by the
melting of ice and glaciers from
higher latitudes and volume expansion
due to the warming of ocean waters.
The recent IPCC report has projected
a global mean sea-level rise of
0.59 m by the end of the 21st century.
This, in fact, may be conservative,
according to other estimates.
On the basis of simulations of the
occurrence of cyclones in the Bay
of Bengal for the period 2041-2060
using an RCM of the Hadley Centre
with emission scenarios of the IPCC,
A.S. Unnikrishnan of the National
Institute of Oceanography, Goa,
and others have shown that in a
global warming scenario, while the
frequency does not show any discernible
long-term trend, the number of intense
cyclones in the post-monsoon period
increases. Combining this result
with a storm surge model, they have
concluded that storm surge heights
will be far greater under warmer
conditions. The increased surge
heights are over and above the mean
sea level, which itself rises under
the impact of warming.
The risk of cyclone-related disasters
is thus far greater in a warmer
subcontinent. The vulnerability
of the population on the 7,000-km
Indian coastline is huge considering
the fact that a quarter of India's
population lives within 50 km of
the coastline and this include some
major cities as well. The mean sea
level rise itself, in the absence
of protection, can inundate a large
swath of predominantly agricultural
land on the coast, and the surviving
coastline faces the threat of extreme
storm surges. India, in fact, is
one of the 27 countries the United
Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
has identified as most vulnerable
to sea level rise.
The impact of climate change on
crop productivity and food security
of the country will also be severe.
According to Sushil Kumar of the
National Centre for Plant Genome
Research (NCPGR) in New Delhi, given
that 60 per cent of land is already
under cultivation, the adverse effects
of climate change are impossible
to mitigate by adding area under
agriculture.
Food Security Under Threat
Crop productivity, Kumar says, must
be stabilised against climate change
by adopting measures to cope with
the higher temperatures and the
highly skewed patterns of water
availability. These include better
water management and the use of
new agriculture technologies in
a region-specific manner and, more
importantly, evolving new cropping
patterns and developing crop varieties
that have tolerance to higher temperatures
and water stress and rice varieties
that can be cultivated aerobically
with irrigation instead of rain-fed
standing water.
Given the imminent deficit in rainfall
in the Indo-Gangetic plains, he
has recommended that conventional
rice cultivation be reduced in this
region and increased in the northwestern
and central-western regions where
rainfall is expected to increase.
"To keep the western parts
of the Indo-Gangetic plains as a
major food-producing region, despite
the adverse effects of climate change,
is the major challenge for agricultural
research," Sushil Kumar wrote
in Current Science.
Changes in plant phenology, or timing
of lifecycle events in the species
such as leaf-formation, flowering,
leaf-fall, fruit development, seed
dispersal and germination, may be
one of the earliest observed responses
to rapid climate change, point out
Monika Koul Moza and A.K. Bhatnagar
of the University of Delhi. These
changes are the result of the plants
adapting to long-prevailing climatic
patterns, they say. An increase
in the atmospheric concentration
of carbon dioxide (CO2) and higher
temperatures could have potentially
serious consequences for both plant
and animal species that depend on
periodically available resources
in the ecosystems of the country,
they warn.
A related study of the impact of
climate change on forest types by
N.H. Ravindranath of the IISc and
others says that by the mid-2080s
around 70 per cent of the forest
grids in India are likely to experience
a shift in forest types. This study
also used an RCM of the Hadley Centre
and the TAR emission scenarios of
the IPCC. According to it, a shift
towards wetter forest types in the
northeastern region and drier forest
types in the northwestern region
is likely, thus impacting the biodiversity
of the country. Also, the increase
in atmospheric CO2 and warming could
result in a 70 to 100 per cent increase
in the Net Primary Productivity
(NPP) of forests.
Impact on Human Health
Climate change can also have a significant
impact on health through vector-borne
diseases because of changes in the
survival and reproduction rates
of the carriers, the intensity and
temporal pattern of vector activity,
and the lifecycle of pathogens within
the vectors. In the context of malaria,
the current climatic conditions
and incidence rates suggest that
the most malaria-prone areas are
the central and eastern regions
of India, covering Madhya Pradesh,
Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Orissa,
West Bengal and Assam.
Considering the changed climatic
conditions into the 2050s, Sumana
Bhattacharya and others in their
study, using a Hadley Centre RCM
and the IPCC emission scenario,
conclude that while malaria is likely
to persist in Orissa, West Bengal
and the southern parts of Assam,
it may shift from the central Indian
region to the south-western coastal
States of Maharashtra, Karnataka
and Kerala. Also the high-altitude
northern States, including Himachal
Pradesh, and the northeastern States
of Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland,
Manipur and Mizoram may become malaria-prone.
The duration of transmission windows,
according to them, is likely to
widen in the north and the west
and shorten in the south. The extent
of vulnerability to malaria will
depend on the prevailing socio-economic
conditions, the immune response
to a new vector-borne disease, and
the existence of associated health
care infrastructure, they point
out.
In spite of the vast spectrum of
potentially adverse impacts that
climate change can have on India
and its population, it is strange
that there was just one official
from the Indian embassy during the
release of the IPCC Summary Report
for Policymakers in Paris.
Contrast this with the Chinese,
who had as many as 10 specialists
at the same meeting. Is this an
indication of the official response
to the imminent changes due to climate
change? It would be sad if bureaucratic
apathy blocked the adoption of appropriate
measures to counter the serious
effects of climate change.
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