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Climate Crisis and the Abandonment of India’s Sanitation Workers

 Why in News ?

  • The Down To Earth (Nov 2025) investigation titled Invisible Deaths: How India’s Climate Crisis Abandons Its Sanitation Workers exposed how rising temperatures, caste hierarchies, and institutional neglect combine to turn sanitation work into a slow, climate-driven genocide.
  • Despite 733 recorded heatstroke deaths (Mar–Jun 2024), the deaths of sanitation workers — predominantly Dalits — remain unrecorded, unacknowledged, and unprotected in India’s climate adaptation and labour policies.
  • It highlights how climate change amplifies caste-based occupational vulnerability and exposes policy blind spots in NAMASTE schemeheat action plans, and labour codes.

Relevance :

GS-2 (Governance & Social Justice):

  • Policy failure in implementing NAMASTE scheme and manual scavenging rehabilitation.
  • Exclusion of sanitation workers from climate adaptation and social protection frameworks.

GS-3 (Environment):

  • Intersection of climate change, heatwaves, and occupational vulnerability.
  • Need for climate justice and inclusive adaptation planning.

GS-1 (Society):

  • Caste-based occupational hierarchy and structural violence under climate stress.
  • Ethical and human rights implications of invisible labour deaths.

GS-4 (Ethics):

  • Moral responsibility of the state toward dignity of labour and distributive justice.

Basic Legal and Institutional Framework

1. Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and Their Rehabilitation Act, 2013

  • Prohibits manual cleaning of sewers and septic tanks without protective equipment.
  • Mandates rehabilitation, alternate livelihood, and compensation to affected families.

2. Supreme Court Directives (2014 & 2025)

  • 2014: Directed States to end manual scavenging and compensate sewer-death families with ₹10 lakh.
  • Jan 2025: Absolute ban on manual scavenging in 6 metro cities, including Delhi.

3. NAMASTE Scheme (National Action for Mechanised Sanitation Ecosystem, 2023)

  • Objective: Eradicate hazardous manual cleaning through mechanisation, training, PPE distribution, and social security.
  • Coverage: 84,902 identified workers, but only 45,871 PPE kits distributed (54% coverage).

4. Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020

  • Contains no heat-protection provisions for sanitation or outdoor workers (only for dock workers).

5. Heat Action Plans (HAPs)

  • Prepared by 23 States, but most ignore caste and occupation-based vulnerability, treating risk as a uniform environmental issue rather than a social injustice.

Key Data (2020–2025)

Period Reported Sewer/Septic Tank Deaths Key Findings
2020–24 294 official deaths ≈ 1 preventable death every 6 days
2024 116 deaths Govt insists “manual scavenging eradicated”
Jan–Jun 2025 42 deaths Delhi worst affected (6 deaths)
2019–23 377 total deaths 90% lacked safety gear (Govt social audit)

→ Reality: Deaths continue under contractual, caste-based, invisible labour systems despite legal bans.

The Climate–Caste Nexus

1. Caste as Structural Heat Exposure:

  • Marginalised castes (mainly Dalits) occupy most heat-exposed occupations — sanitation, waste collection, construction.
  • 150% higher heat exposure recorded among Dalit workers for UTCI (Universal Thermal Climate Index) thresholds between 26°C–35°C.

2. Amplified Risks in Sewers:

  • Sewer interiors amplify temperatures, trap toxic gases (HS, methane), and reduce oxygen.
  • No modified working hours or cooling breaks during heatwaves.

3. Legal Blind Spots:

  • Labour laws and HAPs fail to link climate vulnerability with caste or occupation, perpetuating policy invisibility.

Invisible Deaths and Data Denial

1. Statistical Erasure:

  • Govt claims manual scavenging eradicated; thus, worker deaths are not recorded as occupational or climate casualties.
  • 40% of sanitation workers lack ID documents, excluding them from welfare, insurance, or climate compensation schemes.

2. Reporting Gap:

  • Deaths among contractual workers (under private agencies) often unreported or misclassified.
  • State agencies’ refusal to maintain caste-disaggregated climate data leads to policy blindness.

Privatisation and Precarity

1. Contractualisation of Risk:

  • Example: Chennai protests (Aug 2025) — 2,000 workers resist privatisation cutting wages from ₹22,590 to ₹15,000.
  • Private contractors → reduced accountability, no insurance, no pensions.

2. Mechanisation Gap:

  • NAMASTE’s goal of “no human in sewer” unrealised — most cities still depend on manual cleaning due to lack of machines, budget cuts, and local contractor networks.

Climate Justice and Caste: A Broader Lens

1. Unequal Climate Impacts:

  • Tamil Nadu floods (2015): 90% of injured, 95% of houses damaged belonged to Dalits (IDSN study).
  • Dalit settlements in low-lying flood-prone areas face systemic exclusion from relief and safe water.

2. Regional Parallels:

  • Amnesty International (2025): Similar discrimination among Dalit sanitation workers in Bangladesh’s coastal districts — climate disasters intensifying caste and gender vulnerability.

→ India mirrors this structural violence under climate stress.

Government and Institutional Response

1. NAMASTE Implementation Gaps (Parliamentary Committee, Aug 2025):

  • Warned PPE distribution delays may “deprive many workers of crucial protection.”
  • Urged strict enforcement so no worker handles faecal matter directly.

2. Policy Silences:

  • No national database of sanitation deaths post-2022.
  • Heat Action Plans rarely mention “sanitation” or “Dalit.”
  • No compensation framework linking heat deaths to occupational cause.

Ethical, Governance, and Human Rights Dimensions

1. Structural Violence:

  • Climate change magnifies pre-existing caste oppression, not just environmental exposure.
  • “Invisible deaths” = outcome of policy denial + social hierarchy.

2. Governance Failure:

  • Contradiction between ‘Viksit Bharat’ narrative and denial of basic dignity to sanitation workers.
  • Reflects state apathy, fragmented accountability, and moral vacuum.

3. Moral Paradox:

  • Nation bans manual scavenging but continues to exploit Dalits through informal, dangerous labour chains.
  • Climate crisis turns occupational stigma into existential threat.

What Justice Demands (Policy Imperatives)

1. Formalisation:

  • All sanitation work under permanent government employment with social security and medical cover.

2. Criminal Accountability:

  • Strict prosecution of employers sending workers without safety gear or mechanised tools.

3. Mechanisation:

  • Full mechanisation of sewer cleaning in every ULB (Urban Local Body) within 2 years.

4. Data Justice:

  • Caste- and occupation-disaggregated climate data in all adaptation and resilience frameworks.

5. Integration with Climate Planning:

  • Link sanitation labour conditions to National Adaptation Communication (NAC) and State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCC).

November 2025
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