Current:Home > MarketsClimate scientists say South Asia's heat wave (120F!) is a sign of what's to come -Secure Horizon Growth
Climate scientists say South Asia's heat wave (120F!) is a sign of what's to come
View
Date:2025-04-24 13:17:39
MUMBAI, India — Summer has arrived in South Asia WAY too early.
A punishing heat wave has pushed temperatures past 120F (50C) in some areas. Some schools have closed early for the summer. Dozens of people have died of heatstroke.
The region is already hard-hit by climate change. Extreme heat is common in May. But not in April and March, both of which were the hottest across much of India for more than a century.
"It's smoldering hot! It's also humid, which is making it very difficult," Chrisell Rebello, 37, told NPR in line outside a Mumbai ice cream parlor at 11 p.m. "We need a lot of cold drinks, air conditioning – and multiple baths a day."
Only a fraction of Indians — mostly, the wealthy — have air conditioning. Instead people soak rags in water and hang them in doors and windows.
Still, electric fans and AC have pushed India's electricity demand to a record high.
The problem is that 70% of India's electricity comes from coal. So the government is converting passenger trains to cargo service, to rush coal supplies to beleaguered power plants, and also importing more coal from abroad.
And rolling blackouts are hurting industrial output.
In the short term, experts say India has no choice but to burn coal to keep fans and ACs on. But in the long term, it must transition to renewables, to avoid a vicious circle of warming, says Ulka Kelkar, a Bengaluru-based economist and climate change expert with the World Resources Institute.
"[With] heat plus humidity, at some stage [it] becomes almost impossible for the human body's organs to function normally," Kelkar explains. "Basically the body just cannot cool itself, and a large fraction of our population in India still works outside in the fields, on building construction, in factories which are not cooled."
More than a billion people are at risk of heat-related illness across South Asia. Hospitals are preparing special wards.
This heat wave has also hit at a critical time for the region's wheat harvest. In the Indian state of Punjab — the country's breadbasket — farmers complain of reduced crop yields, and lower profits.
"Due to intense heat, the grain we're harvesting is shriveled," a Punjabi farmer named Major Singh told local TV.
This is exactly when India was hoping to boost wheat exports to help make up for a shortfall in global grain supplies, from the war in Ukraine.
Suruchi Bhadwal, director of earth science and climate change at The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), says the disappointing wheat harvest may be an omen of what's to come, if countries don't do everything within their power to cut carbon emissions and limit warming to below 2-degrees Celsius, in line with United Nations recommendations.
"India is already giving us a warning bell," Bhadwal says. "And each country needs to realize that the warning signs will not be given to us forever."
veryGood! (9116)
Related
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Jews spitting on the ground beside Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land sparks outrage
- Turns out lots and lots of animals embrace same-sex relationships. Why will surprise you
- Child abuse or bad parenting? Jury hears case of Florida dad who kept teenager locked in garage
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- See Jacob Elordi's Full Elvis Presley Transformation in New Priscilla Trailer
- US appeals court to hear arguments over 2010 hush-money settlement of Ronaldo rape case in Vegas
- Elon Musk is being sued for libel for accusing a man of having neo-Nazi links
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Review: Marvel's 'Loki' returns for a scrappy, brain-spinning Season 2 to save time itself
Ranking
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- Point of no return: Pope challenges leaders at UN talks to slow global warming before it’s too late
- Paris is crawling with bedbugs. They're even riding the trains and a ferry.
- Baltimore Police say multiple people have been shot on campus of Morgan State University
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Florida State to add women's lacrosse team after USA TODAY investigation
- Why oust McCarthy? What Matt Gaetz has said about his motivations to remove the speaker of the House
- 21 dead, 18 injured after bus falls off overpass near Venice, Italy
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Baltimore police: 'Multiple victims' from active shooter situation near Morgan State
Pope will open a big Vatican meeting as battle lines are drawn on his reform project
Florida man executed by lethal injection for killing 2 women he met in bars a day apart
'Most Whopper
Tracking the challenges facing Ukrainian grain, all the way from farm to table
TikTok Shop Indonesia stops to comply with the country’s ban of e-commerce on social media platforms
Point of no return: Pope challenges leaders at UN talks to slow global warming before it’s too late