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The deviant race to put a price on nature

August 31, 2021 by Climate portal editor Leave a Comment

A village road that passes through wetlands, with high-tide waters flowing over it. Not automatically a sign of rising sea levels, but in this case very much more likely because adjacent wetlands have been filled in and built upon, and so the water displaced has travelled here.

On 6 August 2021, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) formally approved and released its latest report, the ‘Summary for Policymakers’ of the ‘Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis’ and its underlying assessment.

“It is unequivocal that human influence has warmed the atmosphere, ocean and land. Widespread and rapid changes in the atmosphere, ocean, cryosphere and biosphere have occurred,” is one of what are called the report’s headline statements. “Global surface temperature has increased faster since 1970 than in any other 50-year period over at least the last 2,000 years” is another. “Temperatures during the most recent decade (2011-2020) exceed those of the most recent multi-century warm period, around 6,500 years ago” is one more.

What we have seen, for more than a decade, is the insistence by multi-lateral agencies and organisations that we are beset by natural circumstances that with every passing year have become more threatening. This insistency speaks of a ‘climate emergency’, by which is generally meant the human-induced increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases like CO2 and CH4, which can be connected to rising global temperatures, and to the incidence of droughts, floods heatwaves, crop failures, rising sea levels.

What we have also seen is ‘climate emergency’ as declarations by politicians, by people who are known as ‘policy makers’, by various kinds of scientists and researchers in a number of scientific disciplines, and by international agencies and formal grupings that have long since become too many to count. What they have in common is the claim that they are taking the climate emergency seriously and that we can trust them to do something effective about it.

What do they want to do? The new IPCC report repeats all the old emergencies:

  • The land surface will continue to warm more than the ocean surface.
  • With every additional increment of global warming, changes in extremes continue to become larger.
  • There will be an increasing occurrence of extreme events.
  • The Arctic is projected to experience about three times the rate of global warming.
  • Heavy precipitation events will intensify and become more frequent in most regions.
  • Intense tropical cyclones are projected to increase.
  • Precipitation and surface water flows are projected to become more variable over most land regions.
  • A warmer climate will intensify very wet and very dry weather.
  • Monsoon precipitation is projected to increase in the mid- to long-term for regions that have monsoon rains.

For the year 2021, the latter half of the year is being prepared to see a number of large meetings, or negotiations, on a group of themes that are linked: climate, biodiversity, food, conservation of natural regions. We have begun with highlighting a very few messages from the August IPCC report and will do the same in teh weeks and months ahead for what remains to be rolled out from the well-stocked stables of the multi-lateral derby.

We have seen it become more obvious that the widely spread group of organisations and agencies active in these subjects are following a particular line. This line uses as its currency the addressing of the global climate and environmental crisis. The objectiv is to “save nature” but by turning it into a huge money spinner. That spinning of money is meant to inject new fuel into the world’s economic growth model. This sees nature’s cycles and processes being called instead “natural capital” which is to be priced and tradable on financial markets.

Of course, we strongly oppose such a deviant view of nature and oppose just as much the mendacious financial jugglery that these agencies and organisations are advancing, as fast as they can. Nature is not capital, is not to be and cannot be valued in the ways that they insist upon, and it is abhorrent that nature is being described as ‘tradeable’ in any way. We will continue to explain why between now and the end of 2021. (RG)

Filed Under: Reports & Comment Tagged With: 2021, Climate Change, global warming, IPCC, natural capital, valuing nature

PM Modi at the Climate Action Summit

September 24, 2019 by Climate portal editor Leave a Comment

From the Prime Minister’s Office, this is the text of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s address (the original in Hindi) on 23 September 2019, at the Climate Action Summit 2019 during the 74th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, USA:

The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi addressing at the (United Nations) Climate Action Summit- 2019, in New York, USA on September 23, 2019.

I thank UN Secretary General for organising the Global climate summit.
After having received the Champion of the Earth award last year, this is my first opportunity to address the United Nations. I am pleased that my first meeting during my visit to New York is on the subject of Climate.
Excellencies, various efforts are being made by different countries to fight climate change. We must accept that if we have to overcome a serious challenge like climate change, then what we are doing at the moment is just not enough.
What is needed today, is a comprehensive approach which covers everything from education to values, and from lifestyle to developmental philosophy. What we need is a global people’s movement to bring about behavioral change.
The respect for nature, the judicious use of resources, reducing our needs and living within our means have all been important aspects of both our traditions and present day efforts. Need not Greed has been our guiding principle.
And therefore India today has come not just to talk about the seriousness of this issue, but to present a practical approach and a roadmap. We believe that an ounce of practice is worth more than a ton of preaching.
In India, we are going to increase the share of non fossil fuel, and by 2022 we plan to increase our renewable energy capacity to much beyond 175 GW, and later till 450 GW. In India we have made plans to make our transport sector green through e mobility. India is also working to considerably increase the proportion of the biofuel blend in petrol and diesel.
We have provided clean cooking gas to 150 million families. We have launched the Jal Jeevan mission for water conservation, rainwater harvesting and for the development of water resources. India is going to spend approximately 50 billion dollars on this in the next few years.
On the International forum, almost 80 countries have joined our International Solar Alliance campaign. India and Sweden together with other partners are launching the Leadership group within the Industry transition track. This initiative will provide a platform for governments and the private sector with opportunities for cooperation in the area of Technology innovation. This will help to develop low carbon pathways for industry.
In order to make our infrastructure disaster resilient, India is launching a Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure. I invite Member states to join this coalition.
This year on the occasion of India’s Independence day on 15th August, we called for a peoples movement to end the use of single use plastic. I hope that this will create an awareness at a global level about the harmful effects of single use plastic.
Excellencies, I am happy to announce that tomorrow we are going to inaugurate solar panels on the roof of the UN building, funded by India at a cost of 1 million dollars.
The time for talking is over; the world needs to act now. Thank you. Thank you very much.

Source: Press Information Bureau, Government of India

Filed Under: Reports & Comment Tagged With: 2019, climate, Climate Action Summit, India, UN, UNGA, United Nations

Misreading monsoon

May 16, 2019 by Climate portal editor 1 Comment

As usual in May, there is a welter of forecasts and opinions about the monsoon, the great majority of which are short on understanding and shorter on elementary science. The media – newspapers, television news channels, their websites – are to blame for spreading half-baked forecasts and wild prognoses. Not one of the numerous newspapers and TV channels, whatever the language they employ, bother to provide their reporters a basic grounding in the climatological system that gives us our monsoon.

In the first place, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) issues an operational forecast for the south-west monsoon season (June to September) rainfall for the country as a whole in two stages. The first stage forecast is issued in April and the second stage forecast is issued in June. These forecasts are prepared using state-of-the-art Statistical Ensemble Forecasting system (SEFS) and using the dynamical coupled Ocean-Atmosphere global Climate Forecasting System (CFS) model developed under Monsoon Mission of the Ministry of Earth Sciences.

On 15 April 2019 the IMD issued its first stage forecast. Based on our own in-field observations from the west coast, from the patterns of maximum termperature bands and variations in the lower and central peninsular region, from the sea surface temperatures in the Arabian Sea particular its southerly reaches and ditto for the Bay of Bengal, and from the wind patterns that can be experienced at various places in the peninsula and on the west coast, we find the IMD first stage forecast to be reliable.

It is the chronically ignorant media – which over the last few years has displayed a tendency to prefer some so-called private sector weather forecasters instead of what the Ministry of Earth Sciences provides – found irresponsibly claiming that the monsoon of 2019 will be ‘deficient’ and will also begin ‘late’. Neither of these terms is sensible in any way, and we take no satisfaction in noting that only a media that is insensible to planetary and mesoscale events like climate, will employ such insensible terms in reporting that is meant to educate and benefit the public.

IMD’s April forecast used the following five predictors: 1. the Sea Surface Temperature (SST) Gradient between North Atlantic and North Pacific (in December and January), 2. the Equatorial South Indian Ocean SST (in February), 3. the East Asia Mean Sea Level Pressure (in February and March), 4. North-west Europe Land Surface Air Temperature (in January), and 5. Equatorial Pacific Warm Water Volume (in February and March).

There are two forecasts the IMD makes. One is based on the Monsoon Mission CFS Model, which considers global atmospheric and oceanic initial conditions up to March 2019 and use 47 ensemble members (or kinds of data). The forecast based on the CFS model suggests that the monsoon rainfall during the 2019 monsoon season (June to September) averaged over the country as a whole is likely to be 94% ± 5% of the Long Period Average (LPA).

The second is the forecast based on the operational Statistical Ensemble Forecasting system (SEFS). This shows that quantitatively, the monsoon seasonal rainfall is likely to be 96% of the Long Period Average (LPA) with a model error of ± 5%. The SEFS comprises five category probability forecasts for the June to September rainfall over the country as a whole:

Overall therefore the IMD forecast is for the 2019 monsoon rainfall to be near normal. The IMD has already pointed out (which can be seen from the probabilities of the categories given in the table) that there is only a small chance for the monsoon rainfall to be above normal or excess. In view of the weather events and the climatological changes that we are seeing from day to day in May, ascribing a ‘lateness’ to the monsoon is absurd. Monsoon conditions already exist in and over the Indian land mass and in and over the great watery zones extending southwards from latitude 8 degrees North – and that is why we will find rain-bearing clouds crossing the south-western coastline in the first week of June 2019.

Rahul Goswami

Filed Under: Reports & Comment Tagged With: 2019, forecast, IMD, monsoon, rainfall

Rain for the Rani

July 2, 2017 by Climate portal editor Leave a Comment

We find that the heavy rains that soaked the north Gujarat plains on the night of 1/2 July are testimony to the genius and far-sightedness of the builders of the Rani-ki-Vav, the famed stepwell which was initially built as a memorial to a king in the 11th century AD. The central heavy rainfall zone was immediately to the north-west of Patan, the town nearest to the Rani-ki-Vav, and it is precisely for this sort of rain that this fabulously constructed stepwell was built.

 

Rain for the Rani. At about 8pm on 1 July, dense rainclouds hung over the entire north #Gujarat plains, from ancient Dholavira to Dahod ..2

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..by 8:30 pm showers were being reported from towns in the region while farther north in #Rajasthan, heavy rain pelted Barmer and Jalor ..3

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..Rain for the Rani. At around 9pm the rainfall had become very heavy, reaching 15mm/hour, quickly leaching into the parched soil ..4 pic.twitter.com/zHLFHzcVmH

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..The cores of two cloud masses were converging. The heavy rain was now on two parallel fronts each about 300 km wide ..5 pic.twitter.com/gamGJtCQGp

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

.. Rain for the Rani. At around midnight the Rajasthan and Gujarat core rainfall zones merged and the intensity lessened #monsoon2017 ..6 pic.twitter.com/MCpROK4jLo

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..On the ground, about 2 km outside the old town of Patan, the water levels in an 11th century structure were rising. This remarkable ..7

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..well, the Rani Ki Vav, was sited, designed, engineered and adorned exactly for rains such as this !! Town streets flooded and cars ..8 pic.twitter.com/sKD03C7sYp

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..stalled. But the old channels & chambers of the Rani Ki Vav were proving the vision and sagacity of the celebrated stepwell’s creators ..9

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..Designed as an inverted temple highlighting the sanctity of water, the Rani Ki Vav combines #water storage with exceptional artistry ..10 pic.twitter.com/CWxBh2cyW7

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..We marvel at the foresight and knowledge of the Vav’s builders. To the north and north-west of the stepwell lay the zone in which this .11

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..torrent of rain fell over 1/2 July, recharging the subterranean water storage system whose design origin is the 3rd millennium BC ..12 pic.twitter.com/wEWYyCRgnu

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

 

..This is the 4 hour 30 min sequence of intense #monsoon2017 rainfall in north #Gujarat and adjacent #Rajasthan – Rain for the Rani pic.twitter.com/zeuKb6SCZG

— Indiaclimate (@Indiaclimate) July 2, 2017

Filed Under: Monsoon 2017, Reports & Comment Tagged With: 2017, Gujarat, heritage, India, monsoon, rain, Rajasthan, stepwell, traditional knowledge, water

In 2016, record new renewable energy added, and cheaply

April 12, 2017 by Climate portal editor Leave a Comment

Recent reports bring positive news related to renewable energy investment and the feasibility of a 100% renewable energy future. The UN Environment Programme (UN Environment, or UNEP), the Frankfurt School-UNEP Collaborating Centre, and Bloomberg New Energy Finance released a report titled ‘Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment 2017,’ which finds that wind, solar, biomass and waste-to-energy, geothermal, small hydro and marine sources added 138.5 gigawatts to global power capacity in 2016, up 8% from the 127.5 gigawatts added in 2015.

The report indicates that as the cost of clean technology continues to fall, the world added record levels of renewable energy capacity in 2016, at an investment level 23% lower than the previous year. According to UN Environment, the added generating capacity roughly equals that of the world’s 16 largest existing power producing facilities combined.

Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment 2017, published on April 6th by UN Environment, the Frankfurt School-UNEP Collaborating Centre, and Bloomberg New Energy Finance, finds that all investments in renewables totaled $241.6 billion (excluding large hydro). These investments added 138.5 gigawatts to global power capacity in 2016, up 9 per cent from the 127.5 gigawatts added the year before.

Investment in renewables capacity was roughly double that in fossil fuel generation; the corresponding new capacity from renewables was equivalent to 55 per cent of all new power, the highest to date. The proportion of electricity coming from renewables excluding large hydro rose from 10.3 per cent to 11.3 per cent. This prevented the emission of an estimated 1.7 gigatons of carbon dioxide.

The total investment was $241.6 billion (excluding large hydro), the lowest since 2013. This was in large part a result of falling costs: the average dollar capital expenditure per megawatt for solar photovoltaics and wind dropped by over 10 per cent.

Filed Under: Reports & Comment Tagged With: carbon, clean technology, electricity, energy, geothermal, hydro, photovoltaic, renewables, solar, UNEP

A tribute to the weathermen of Bharat

April 12, 2016 by Climate portal editor 9 Comments

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When the weather causes anxiety, in the districts and towns, harassed administrators and the impatient public turn quickly to the weatherman. Whether for advice about a possible heat wave, about thunderstorms or hail storms, about extended dry spells, about the possibility of rainfall during a crop sowing period one week distant, it is the local weatherman who has the knowledge and provides the answers.

That weatherman – and weatherwoman, for the service has a number of women scientists – is from the India Meteorological Department, the weather watchers for Bharat.

Theirs is often a thankless task, of poring over the output from instruments and computations, ensuring that the essential information about weather conditions six, 12 or 24 hours hence is transmitted to all those to whom it matters.

Our weathermen scan the skies with their instruments so that they can issue, to airports and airfields all over Bharat, the ‘meteorological aerodrome report’ (or METARs) on which all our commercial flights depend. Our weathermen scan the seas with their instruments to issue the sea weather reports and fleet forecasts for marine traffic in the Arabian Sea, the Bay of Bengal, the Andaman Sea and the nearer Indian Ocean.

India Climate portal thanks readers for the appreciative responses to this tribute, and for the comments (below) which we urge the Ministry of Earth Sciences to consider.

Our weathermen scan the atmosphere with the aid of the orbital eyes of our satellites so that, for every single district, an agricultural meteorology forecast is issued every day and for every crop season. Our weathermen scan the routes of the Indian Railway system, the largest and most heavily utilised in the world, for threatening weather conditions that would affect the running of trains. They do this every single day, round the clock.

Today the India Meteorological Department has issued its first forecast for the 2016 monsoon, the Indian summer monsoon, whose patterns have been so well known for all our recorded history. It is a forecast that has been impatiently awaited this year, because of the shortages of water in our river basins, because of the likelihood – as ever – of heat waves, and because we have been so very worried about whether we will get the rains that eluded Bharat in 2015 and 2014.

The short answer is: yes we will. The details of the percentages, the probabilities, the averages, the likely ranges and other ponderables are all over the news. We’d like to compliment the people behind the forecast.

We sincerely thank the women and men of the India Meteorological Department for their extraordinary efforts – every day, week, season and year – to serve us. The IMD today provides us, in the public domain, through the internet, via television, with the help of mobile phone messages, and through smartphone apps, an array of weather services. These scientists, administrators, technicians and field staff have worked as hard to make this range of services available to us as they have worked to understand our ‘mausam’ better. Theirs is a science whose complexity defies the most powerful computing systems available, and they translate what they see into language that guides us as we go about our daily routines. It calls for a breadth of skills that must be applauded.

A sense of history and philosophy guides their work. The scientists and technicians of the Department take as much inspiration from the Upanishads (which contain serious discussion about the processes of cloud formation, rain, and the seasonal cycles) and from Varahamihira’s classical work, the Brihatsamhita, as they do from the insights that they collaborate on today in what is known as earth systems science. It is a remarkable legacy that is very much alive in the offices and field stations of the IMD.

For their work, and as representatives of the widely distributed IMD network of staff, we thank:
Director General of Meteorology, Laxman Singh Rathore; Additional Director General of Meteorology (Research), Bishwajit Mukhopadhyay; Deputy Director General of Meteorology (Upper Air Instruments), Devendra Pradhan; Deputy Director General of Meteorology (Surface Instruments), Rajesh Ramdas Mali; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Regional Meteorological Centre New Delhi, Anand Kumar Sharma; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Regional Meteorological Centre Mumbai, K S Hosalikar; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Regional Meteorological Centre Kolkata, Gakul Chandra Debnath; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Regional Meteorological Centre Chennai, S Bagulayan Thampi; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Regional Meteorological Centre Guwahati, Sanjay Oneill Shaw; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Regional Meteorological Centre Nagpur, P K Nandankar; Head, Agromet Services K K Singh; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Satmet, New Delhi, Ashok Kumar Sharma; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Hydromet, New Delhi, Surinder Kaur; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Services, New Delhi, Brahma Prakash Yadav; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Organisation, New Delhi, S D Attri; Deputy Director General of Meteorology, EMRC, New Delhi, Sunil Kumar Peshin; and Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Numerical Weather Prediction, New Delhi, Swapan Kumar Roy Bhowmik. Thank you all for a job very well done indeed.

Rahul Goswami

Filed Under: Monsoon 2016, Reports & Comment Tagged With: Bharat, climate, IMD, India Meteorological Department, weather

Fair shares and the INDCs

November 12, 2015 by Climate portal editor Leave a Comment

ICP_CSO_INDCs_report

The initial climate action pledges made by countries, and submitted to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), called Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs), have been analysed and reviewed by a group of 17 international civil society organisations. These findings have been released in a report, ‘Fair Shares: A Civil Society Equity Review of INDCs’.

INDCs refer to Intended Nationally Determined Contributions, the official name of the UNFCCC for the climate targets and actions which a majority of countries submitted on or before October 1, the deadline set by the UNFCCC. They are commonly referred to as “national climate targets/actions” or “pledges”. They are referred to as the initial offers of countries in terms of responding to climate change, and as the building blocks of the new global climate agreement, which is set to be finalized at the upcoming Paris climate conference. The current INDCs will be implemented from 2020 to 2025 or 2030.

The assessment includes INDCs covering 145 countries and some 80 percent of current global emissions. This review is different because it uses not only a science-based assessment of the necessary global level of climate action, but also uses widely accepted notions of equity to present fair shares of the necessary effort for each country. The equity and fair shares standards are anchored on the UNFCCC’s core principles of “common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities” and the “right to sustainable development”. The equity and fair shares standards used in this review take into account a range of interpretations of these principles. The group of international civil society organisations has said that the principles of equity and fair shares can be defined and quantified robustly, rigorously, transparently and scientifically, while accounting for differences of perspectives.

This review has said: “All countries should undertake their fair share of the global effort to tackle climate change. Each country’s fair share is based on its historical responsibility and capacity. Some countries have already emitted a great deal for a long time, contributing to warming that is happening already, and they thrive from the infrastructure and institutions they have been able to set up because of this. Some countries have much higher capacity to act than others, due to their higher income and wealth, level of development and access to technologies.”

This review is important because if the INDCs are not reviewed using a global carbon budget based on the science and widely held notions of equity, we will not be able to determine if each country committed its fair share of climate action. Equity and fairness are vital to unlocking cooperation, because – as the IPCC concluded in its most recent report – agreements that are seen to be fair are more likely to actually work. We will also not know if they are enough collectively to stave off dangerous global warming. The review sets a basis to demand higher ambition from each countries in Paris and beyond.

The review shows that the INDC commitments will likely lead the world to a devastating 3°C or more warming above pre-industrial levels. The current INDCs amount to barely half of the emissions cuts required by 2030.

Moreover, the INDCs submitted by all major developed countries fall well short of their fair shares. From the list of countries highlighted in the report, Russia’s INDC represents zero contribution towards committing its fair share. Japan’s represents about a tenth, the United States’ about a fifth, and the European Union’s just over a fifth of its fair share.

Most developed countries have fair shares that are already too large to fulfill exclusively within their borders, which is why there is a need for them to provide additional resources for developing countries to do more than their fair share, particularly through finance, technology, and capacity-building. However, there remains a striking lack of clear financial commitments from developed countries.

On the other hand, the majority of developing countries’ mitigation pledges exceed or broadly meet their fair share, including Kenya, the Marshall Islands, China, Indonesia, and India. Brazil’s INDC represents slightly more than two thirds of its fair share.

The question is: can developing countries with the largest rising emissions, such as China and Indonesia, now sit back because they have met their fair share? While the report clearly shows that the onus is on developed countries to commit more emissions cuts and financing, by no means does it give a free pass to developing countries. Our primary call is for each country – developing and developed – to do all it can in terms of climate action, working even to surpass its fair share.

What must therefore be done to close the emissions gap? The Paris COP21 agreement must ensure that domestic commitments and global targets alike are set in accordance with science and equity. It must also include a strong mechanism to increase the ambition of INDCs before their implementation in 2020, and every five years thereafter. Developed countries must make substantial new commitments to finance mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage in developing countries for a fully equitable climate agreement. Finally, countries must scale up action for sustainable energy transformation.

[The group: ActionAid International, Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Development, Climate Action Network South Asia, CARE International, Center for International Environmental Law, Christian Aid, CIDSE, Climate Action Network Latin America, Friends of the Earth International, International Trade Union Confederation, LDC Watch International, Oxfam, Pan African Climate Justice Alliance, SUSWATCH Latin America, Third World Network, What Next Forum, and WWF International. The Climate Equity Reference Project, an initiative of EcoEquity and the Stockholm Environment Institute, provided analytical support. It is also supported by numerous social movements, networks, and other civil society groups in the international, regional, and national levels.]

Filed Under: Reports & Comment Tagged With: carbon budget, China, climate agreement, Climate Change, climate conference, COP21, development, emissions, equity, Europe, INDC, India, Russia, UNFCCC, USA

Where they waited for rain in 2015

September 18, 2015 by Climate portal editor 1 Comment

RG_ICP_20150918

With two weeks of the June to September monsoon remaining in 2015, one of the end-of-season conclusions that the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has spoken of is that four out of ten districts in the country has had less rainfall than normal.

This overview is by itself alarming, but does not aid state governments and especially line ministries plan for coming months, particularly for agriculture and cultivation needs, water use, the mobilisation of resources for contingency measures, and to review the short- and medium-term objectives of development programmes.

RG_ICP_100districts_table_20150918The detailed tabulation provided here is meant to provide guidance of where this may be done immediately – in the next two to four weeks – and how this can be done in future.

The table lists 100 districts each of which have readings 15 weeks of rainfall variation – the numbers are not rainfall in millimetres (mm) but the variation in per cent from the long-term normal for that district for that week. The colour codes for each district’s week cell are the same as those used for the new 11-grade rainfall categorisation.

The districts are chosen on the basis of the size of their rural populations (calculated for 2015). Thus Purba Champaran in Bihar, Bhiwani in Haryana, Rewa in Madhya Pradesh and Viluppuram in Tamil Nadu are the districts in those states with the largest rural populations.

In this way, the effect of rainfall variability, from Week 1 (which ended on 3 June) to Week 15 (which ended on 9 September), in the districts with the largest rural populations can be analysed. Because a large rural population is also a large agricultural population, the overall seasonal impact on that district’s agricultural output can also be inferred.

The distribution of the districts is: six from Uttar Pradesh; five each from Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal; four each from Assam, Jammu and Kashmir, and Kerala; three from Uttarakhand; two from Himachal Pradesh; one each from Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim and Tripura.

Using the new 11-grade rainfall categorisation, a normal rainweek is one in which the rainfall is between +10% more and -10% less for that week. The overview for this group of 100 districts, only 11 have had five or more normal weeks of rain out of 15 weeks. In alarming contrast, there are 77 districts which have had three or fewer normal weeks of rain – that is, more than three-fourths of these most populous districts. Half the number (51 districts) have had two, one or no normal weeks of rain. And 22 of these districts have had only one or no normal weeks of rain.

From this group of 100 most populous (rural population) districts Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh and Nagaon in Assam have had the most deficit rainweeks, tallying 13, out of the 15 tabulated so far. There are ten districts which have had 12 deficit rainweeks out of 15 and they are (in decreasing order of rural population): Muzaffarpur (Bihar), Pune and Jalgaon (Maharashtra), Surguja (Chhattisgarh), Panch Mahals and Vadodara (Gujarat), Firozpur (Punjab), Thiruvananthapuram (Kerala), Hoshiarpur (Punjab) and Mewat (Haryana).

– Rahul Goswami

Filed Under: Monsoon 2015, Reports & Comment Tagged With: agriculture, district, IMD, India, monsoon, population, rain, rural, urban, water

A district lab for solar in India

August 12, 2015 by Climate portal editor Leave a Comment

A 5MW grid-connected solar power plant in Jodhpur district, Rajasthan. Photo: MNRE

A 5MW grid-connected solar power plant in Jodhpur district, Rajasthan. Photo: MNRE

In the district of Chitradurga, Karnataka, at the edge of the town of Challakere, stands a project run by the Bangalore-based Indian Institute of Science (IISC) which is a test array for concentrated solar power. Rows of shallow parabolic troughs, made of specially coated aluminum, stretch for more than 300 metres. Above them are water pipes set to catch sunlight reflected from the troughs. When the project begins operation in a few weeks, the water in the pipes will be heated to 200 °C. The hot water will go to a heat exchanger attached to a small turbine that will produce 100 kilowatts of electricity.

A part of the Solar Energy Research Institute for India and the United States (SERIIUS), and primarily funded by the state government of Karnataka, this small solar array will be used to test various reflective materials and heat-transfer fluids (including, for instance, molten salt in addition to water) from multiple manufacturers. Dozens of small wireless sensors will collect data and send it via the Internet to a dashboard at IISC, where it can be analysed and catalogued. The objective is to find the combinations of components that best suit conditions in India.

ICP_solar_challakere_mapThe Solar Energy Research Institute for India and the United States (SERIIUS), co-led by the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), USA. The SERIIUS programme is to develop and prepare “emerging and revolutionary solar electricity technologies” which can be used by the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Energy Mission and the American Department of Energy’s SunShot Initiative. SERIIUS is planned to accelerate the development of solar electric technologies by lowering the cost per watt of photovoltaics (PV) and concentrated solar power (CSP).

The BJP government has pledged to create dozens of ‘ultra mega solar power parks’ of 500 megawatts and above to feed power to the national electricity grid. The government has said that energy policies such as those represented by the Challakere concentrated solar power experiment will reduce annual carbon dioxide emissions by 550 million tons. [This article was first published in the MIT Technology Review and can be found in full here.]

Filed Under: Reports & Comment Tagged With: Bangalore, concentrated solar, India, KarnatakaIISC, NREL, photovoltaic, PV, SERIIUS, solar, USA

Health now part of PM’s Council on Climate Change

July 21, 2015 by Climate portal editor Leave a Comment

ICP_20150721

The Prime Minister’s Council on Climate Change has included a new Mission on Climate Change and Health. A National Expert Group on Climate Change and Health has been constituted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to address the issues related to adverse effects of climate change on human health.

According to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, there is increasing concern in India over the effects of climate change on human health. Climate change affects the social and environmental determinants of health and weather events such as storms, floods, cyclones amplify the spread of vector-borne diseases, and the spread of food- and water-borne diseases.

There are complex interactions between both causes and effects. Ecological processes, such as impacts on biodiversity and changes in disease vectors, and social dynamics, can amplify these risks. Graphic: Lancet

There are complex interactions between both causes and effects. Ecological processes, such as impacts on biodiversity and changes in disease vectors, and social dynamics, can amplify these risks. Graphic: Lancet

Work under this new mission is expected to complement running initiatives such as the National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS). This programme focuses on prevention through awareness generation, behavior and life-style changes, early diagnosis and treatment of persons with high levels of risk factors and their referral to higher facilities for appropriate management. Funding is provided for human resources, infrastructure, early screening, and treatment as well as for Information, Education & Communication (IEC) activities.

India and China suffer over USD 1.89 trillion annually in terms of the value of lives lost and ill health caused from air pollution, according to a major recent report which has underlined how climate change threatens to undermine half a century of progress in global health.

An overview of the links between greenhouse gas emissions, climate change, and health. Social responses also ameliorate some risks through adaptive actions. Graphic: Lancet

An overview of the links between greenhouse gas emissions, climate change, and health. Social responses also ameliorate some risks through adaptive actions. Graphic: Lancet

The analysis by the Lancet Commission on Health and Climate Change concluded that the benefits to health resulting from slashing fossil fuel use are so large that tackling global warming also presents the greatest global opportunity to improve people’s health in the 21st century. The Commission’s work was supported by the UN World Health Organisation.

The current trajectory, of average global temperature warming by 4 Celsius has very serious and potentially catastrophic effects for human health and human survival. The Commission said this must be seen as a medical emergency. The comprehensive analysis sets out the direct risks to health, including heatwaves, floods and droughts, and indirect – but no less deadly – risks, including air pollution, spreading diseases, famines and mental ill-health. A rapid phase-out of coal from the global energy mix is among the commission’s top recommendations, given the millions of premature deaths from air pollution this would prevent.

“The effects of climate change are being felt today, and future projections represent an unacceptably high and potentially catastrophic risk to human health,” said the report. “The implications of climate change for a global population of 9 billion people threatens to undermine the last half century of gains in development and global health. The direct effects of climate change include increased heat stress, floods, drought, and increased frequency of intense storms, with the indirect threatening population health through adverse changes in air pollution, the spread of disease vectors, food insecurity and under-nutrition, displacement, and mental ill health.”

Filed Under: Reports & Comment Tagged With: Climate Change, disease, fossil fuel, global warming, health, India, ministry, population, risk, WHO

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