The expansion of industry remains linked to government expenditures on infrastructure

- Direct Impact: Agriculture, the backbone of the rural economy, is the most vulnerable sector. The recent erratic monsoon and preceding heat waves have led to delayed sowing, reduced crop yields, and increased pest attacks. This directly impacts farmers’ incomes, aggravates rural distress, and threatens food security.
- Inflationary Pressure: A fall in agricultural output, particularly of vegetables and pulses, immediately translates into food inflation. This erodes the purchasing power of households, especially the poor, and complicates the RBI’s monetary policy management.
- Supply Chain Disruption: Extreme weather events like floods and landslides damage critical infrastructure such as roads, railways, and ports, disrupting the movement of raw materials and finished goods. This cripples manufacturing activity and increases logistics costs, impacting the ‘Make in India’ initiative.
- Operational Halts: Severe heat waves and water scarcity can force industrial units to scale back or halt operations. Furthermore, a surge in demand for cooling puts immense pressure on the power grid, leading to outages that affect both industrial and commercial activities.
- GDP Growth: The cumulative effect of disruptions in agriculture, industry, and services has a direct impact on GDP growth. Potential growth is curtailed as resources are diverted from productive investments to repair and reconstruction.
- Fiscal Strain: Governments are forced to increase expenditure on disaster relief, rehabilitation, and schemes like MGNREGA to provide a safety net. Simultaneously, reduced economic activity leads to lower tax revenues, widening the fiscal deficit, and constraining public investment in other crucial areas like health and education.
- Investment Climate: Increased climate-related risks can deter both domestic and foreign investment. Investors seek stability and predictability, and growing climate volatility makes India a riskier destination, potentially hampering capital formation.
- Vulnerable Populations: The impact is disproportionately borne by the most vulnerable sections—small and marginal farmers, landless labourers, and urban poor. Loss of livelihoods often triggers distress migration, straining urban infrastructure and services.
- Public Health Crisis: Climate events precipitate public health emergencies. Heat waves lead to a rise in heatstroke cases, while floods result in an increase in water-borne diseases like cholera and dengue, further burdening the healthcare system.
- Climate-Resilient Agriculture: Promoting the adoption of drought-resistant crop varieties, micro-irrigation techniques (Per Drop More Crop), and diversifying rural incomes away from sole dependence on agriculture are crucial. Revamping the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) to ensure timely and transparent claim settlements is essential.
- Robust and Adaptive Infrastructure: All new infrastructure projects under the National Infrastructure Pipeline must incorporate climate-resilience standards. Retrofitting existing critical infrastructure to withstand extreme weather is equally important.
- Mainstreaming Climate Risk in Financial Planning: The RBI and SEBI should mandate climate-risk disclosures for banks and corporations. This would enable better risk assessment and channel investments towards sustainable projects. Promoting green financing and ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) investing is vital.
- Strengthening Governance and Local Capacity: Empowering local bodies with funds, functions, and functionaries for effective disaster management is key. State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCC) must be translated into concrete, district-level implementation with robust monitoring.
- Investing in Early Warning Systems: Leveraging technology like AI and satellite imagery can enhance the accuracy and lead time of weather forecasts, enabling better preparedness and minimizing loss of life and property.
