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Progress should not just be fast but future-proof

Context and Urgency

  • India faces escalating climate risks: rising temperatures, erratic monsoons, floods, droughts, and crop failures threaten millions.
  • Over 80% of Indias population lives in climate disaster-prone districts (World Bank data).
  • These climate physical risks (CPRs) pose systemic threats to economic stability, public health, and national security.

Relevance : GS3(Climate Change)

Nature of Climate Physical Risks (CPRs)

  • CPRs include acute shocks (floods, heatwaves) and chronic stresses (shifting monsoons, prolonged droughts).
  • Climate projections (long-term) differ from weather forecasts (short-term) and are vital for proactive adaptation.
  • Effective management of CPRs requires long-term planning rather than reactive measures.

Global Climate Action: Mitigation vs Adaptation

  • Global efforts are split between mitigation (emission reduction) and adaptation (building resilience).
  • Adaptation is increasingly necessary worldwide due to intensifying climate impacts, not just in the Global South.
  • Despite its importance, funding is disproportionately allocated to mitigation, overlooking adaptation measures like resilient infrastructure.
  • Investing $1 in adaptation yields a $4 return by reducing economic losses and disaster recovery costs (UNEP).

Framework for Assessing CPRs

  • CPR risk = function of hazard (climate events), exposure (who/what is at risk), and vulnerability (capacity to withstand/recover).
  • This framework underscores that climate risk is multifaceted, involving environmental and socio-economic dimensions.

Regulatory and Reporting Developments

  • Financial regulators worldwide are moving from voluntary to mandatory climate risk disclosures.
  • Indias Reserve Bank is integrating climate risks into its regulatory framework.
  • The IFRS ISSB S2 standard sets global expectations for climate risk disclosure, linking CPR assessments to business continuity.

Indias Current Challenges

  • India’s climate risk assessments are fragmented across multiple agencies and methodologies, lacking standardization.
  • Existing tools and studies (e.g., flood maps, vulnerability atlases) are valuable but not unified or centrally accessible.
  • Global climate models often fail to capture Indias hyper-local climate realities, limiting accuracy.
  • This fragmentation hinders informed policymaking and business decision-making.

Initiatives and Way Forward

  • India has initiated a National Adaptation Plan (NAP) aligned with the Paris Agreement, with an Adaptation Communication submitted in 2023.
  • The upcoming NAP report aims for district-level granularity across nine thematic sectors.
  • A robust, India-specific CPR assessment tool is urgently needed to unify data and methodologies.
  • Such a tool should combine:
    • Localized climate modelling,
    • Granular risk assessment,
    • Centralized climate risk data repository,
    • Transparent, science-based iterative processes.
  • This will enable:
    • Public sector to design resilient policies and infrastructure,
    • Private sector to assess value chain risks and meet investor demands.

May 2025
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