India’s workers are trapped in a vicious cycle of coal and heat

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India’s workers are trapped in a vicious cycle of coal and heat
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India still relies on coal for roughly three-quarters of power generation. Read more at straitstimes.com.

NEW DELHI – Standing by vast, ash-coloured coalfields, miner Rabi Behera expressed few doubts about the job at hand. To cope with increasingly brutal temperatures, India has to keep its power grid standing– and for now that means digging up ever expanding quantities of the dirtiest fossil fuel.

As a result, India is now the third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, even if it still lags China and the US, and per-capita figures remain below the global average. A vast, climate-vulnerable nation is making its own predicament worse, leaving hundreds of millions of its workers caught in a vicious heat cycle – with all the health and economic productivity costs that come with toiling in sweltering conditions.

Temperatures always spike before the monsoon hits around June. But blistering, life-threatening levels like those reached in 2022, and tested again this year, are becoming more common. A changing climate has made extreme heat 30 times more likely in India. The impact is far wider, though, threatening overall productivity, long-term health and even survival, as hundreds of millions are exposed to extreme conditions – a greater proportion of the population than anywhere else globally. Heat may lower the quality of life for almost 600 million Indians by 2100.

But heat waves are not explicitly among the disasters eligible for relief under the National and State Disaster Response Funds, and a study of state- and city-level heat action plans by the Centre for Policy Research think tank found significant gaps. Cyclists cover their faces with cloths to protect from the sun in Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh, India, on May 11, 2023. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

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