In 2018 and 2019, one extreme weather event happened almost every month in India, says CSE and Down To Earth’s State of India’s Environment 2020 report

Despite fewer events in 2019 compared to 2018, 18 per cent more people died in that year 

Nimli (Alwar), February 9, 2020: The continuity and intensity of extreme weather events in India in the 2018-19 period has taken even climate scientists and meteorologists by complete surprise, says the latest State of India’s Environment Annual, which was released here today by Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot. The world witnessed 286 and 228 extreme weather events in 2018 and 2019, respectively. Of these, India recorded 23 in 2018 and nine in 2019. 

In terms of deaths, 48 per cent of the deaths in Asia due to extreme weather events happened in India. And in 2019, there were more deaths in India even though the number of such events were fewer – 2.038 people died in 2019 due to extreme weather events, compared to 1.396 in 2018. 

Extreme weather events include conditions like drought, wildfire, flood, landslides, extreme temperatures, fog and storm. 

January saw the end of the north-east monsoon season with a 44 per cent deficit rain -- the third highest deficit in the past 10 years. North India had one of the coldest and driest winters ever, as the extreme conditions spilled into February. In March, an unseasonal heat wave roasted Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala. In April, thunderstorms with cloud-to-ground lightning strikes began affecting states in east, central and north-east India. The month ended with the formation of a rare pre-monsoon cyclone (Fani). 

May and June were marked by a spate of heat waves. By the first week of June, the country had undergone 73 spells of heat wave conditions, 11 of them extreme; with the maximum deaths in Bihar (over 200). The conditions were so harsh that district magistrates of five districts invoked section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code to restrict public activities during daytime. 

There was delay in the onset of south-west monsoon, and July started with a weak rainfall. But once it started raining, it poured. Twelve states received over 60 per cent surplus rains in the second week of July. The resultant floods in Bihar and Assam affected over 10 million people and claimed 168 lives. The rains came in short bursts of heavy downpours followed by drier periods, a pattern that continued till September. In all, there were 1,250 events of extreme rainfall during the year, or more than three per day. 

In October and November, cyclones Hikaa, Kyarr and Maha in the Arabian Sea and cyclone Bulbul in the Bay of Bengal formed and intensified in quick succession. With cyclone Pawan in December -- the total number of cyclones in the northern Indian Ocean region reached eight. This is the highest number of cyclones in a single year since 1976. 

Says the State of India’s Environment report: “The continuity of extreme events from one month to the next means that the world needs to always be on its toes. Scientists and environmentalists have called this a climate emergency.” 

CSE’s 2020 Annual Media Conclave and Anil Agarwal Dialogue on the State of India’s Environment (February 9-11, 2020) has brought together some key experts on the subject. To see their presentations, visit www.cseindia.org. 

The Down To Earth State of India’s Environment Annual 2020 is available here on sale: https://csestore.cse.org.in/books/state-of-india-s-environment/soe-2019-in-figures-and-soe-2020-combo-offer.html 

Hindi journalists can access the day’s story on this subject in Hindi on www.downtoearth.org.in 

To reach our experts and access other CSE resources, please contact Sukanya Nair, the CSE Media Resource Centre, at sukanya.nair@cseindia.org, 8816818864.

 

 

Agenda
Book
State of India’s Environment 2020
Report
Breathing Space
How to Track and Report Air Pollution Under the National Clean Air Programme
Press Releases
New Delhi/Nimli, February 10, 2020
Malnutrition-free India by 2022? Unlikely, because the government’s POSHAN Abhiyaan’s implementation poor and targets unambitious -- says CSE and Down To Earth’s State of India’s Environment 2020 report
New Delhi/Nimli, February 10, 2020
More people displaced due to natural disasters and climate change than conflicts and war in 2018 -- says CSE and Down To Earth’s State of India’s Environment 2020 report
New Delhi/Nimli, February 9, 2020
CSE’s annual media conclave and Anil Agarwal Dialogue 2020 inaugurated by Ashok Gehlot, chief minister of Rajasthan
New Delhi/Nimli, February 7, 2020
CSE’s annual media conclave and Anil Agarwal Dialogue on the state of India’s environment to be held from February 9-11
Presentations
DAY 2
National air quality trends What we know so far from the last reported NAMP data
By: Anumita Roy Chowdhury
Reinventing the Bus System for Clean Air
By: Sayan
Do you know what you may be breathing?
By: Mukesh Sharma
The Dilemma of Waste-To-Energy An Overview
Trade and its Intereace with Agriculture
By: Shalini Bhutani
Processed food Planned Catastrophe
By: Sachin Kumar Jain
Junk Food - Labelling it Right
By: Amit Khurana, CSE
DAY 1
Extreme Weather and What it Means for India’s Poor
By: Akshit Sangomla
Key Drivers of Monsoon Craziness
By: Raghu
Demystifying Wds and their links to Climate Change
By: A. P. Dimri
Climate Induced Migration
By: Umi Daniel
Climate Emergency: The human tragedy of migration
By: Binod Khadria
Developing Countries and Climate Negotiations: The Road to Glasgow
By: Kapil Tarun

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