Underlying advantages of Lockdown
' Lockdown has changed the environment around
us'
'If we want a better life, we have to treat
nature better.'
That's nature's message to us.'
This
is the message what I have learned from the COVID19 pandemic.
It has also taught us, we will get what we deserve!
If we want a better life, we have to treat nature better and
behave properly. That's nature's message to us.
"One of the benefits of the lockdown is
now people will realize that human beings are one of the main reasons for
pollution,"
After
several years, we get to breathe clean air, rivers have clean water, birds are
flocking back. Do you think it is the right time to look at what we human
beings have been doing to nature?
Yes, the lockdown due to coronavirus has changed the
environment around us.
In India, air pollution has been the 5th largest killer. When
there is less pollution, we are also saving lives.
One of the benefits of the lockdown is now people will realize
that human beings are one of the main reasons for pollution.
I read that we could see The Himalayas from Jalandhar, which is about 200 km away from the mountain ranges!
Many people from the older generation said they never imagined they would be
able to see the mountain ranges in their lifetime.
But who is responsible for such a situation? Human beings. And
you don't need any research or scientific paper on this.
Nature has clearly shown that we did this!
Similarly, the Ganga and the Yamuna are cleaner now, in parts at
least. So, who has been polluting the air and the rivers?
We, the people.
Another lesson the lockdown has taught us is we need only weeks
or months to clean up some of the mess we have made, if we really want to do
the cleaning!
Do you think people
will start looking at climate change seriously now?
I think so. We have seen the changes that have happened in
nature and the environment. Now, people will be aware of what they should not do to
the environment.
Early this year, your
team did a study and found that India's urban cities are turning into heat
islands. Is it due to climate change or anthropogenic forcing, that is, human
effect like your study said?
It is also due to climate change.
When we say anthropogenic forcing, we mean this; when human
beings cut trees, change the surface of the land, and convert that space to
more built-up area, that will affect the reflected radiation and modify the
surface temperature.
These have contributed to an increase in urban heat in a big
way.
When there are more
vehicles, more industries, more power plants, more buildings, more emissions,
more energy consumption, there is more heat in an area. All these are due to
human interventions.
This shouldn't be
confused with the temperature in the cities. When we say urban heat islands, it
is comparing the cities with their respective neighborhood.
What happens in the
suburban areas also affects the calculation of urban heat island intensity.
You spoke of preserving the green
cover in cities. Kerala is one state that has a lot of green covers but for the
last couple of years, it is reported that the state has become 3-4 degrees
hotter. How do you explain this?
Kerala is one state where
significant changes are happening in the environment especially in the Western ghats.
What happens in the
Western ghats directly affect the climate of Kerala.
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But I don't think the
temperature must have risen 3-4 degrees in the last couple of years.
Another interesting fact
about Kerala is that it does not have any 'villages' now. As I am from Kerala,
I can say for sure that most of the areas in Kerala are 'suburban' areas.
Many changes have taken
place in Kerala regarding the way houses are constructed now and also the way
we treat our land, hills, and water bodies.
A number of water bodies
in Kerala have shrunk, and many small hills have disappeared completely.
There is less open land,
but more built-up areas. All these factors have had a great impact on the local
climate.
So, it
is anthropogenic forcing that has affected the rise in temperature in Kerala...
I would say, Kerala is
the best example of how human activities can change the environment thus
affecting the local climate dramatically.
For instance, when we had
paddy fields, there was a lot more groundwater.
Paddy fields made way to
cash crops when people found that cultivating paddy was unviable or not
profitable, and then to more buildings and structures.
These changed the groundwater availability, surface runoff, and soil moisture.
This has also changed the
environment, temperature, and thus the local climate in Kerala.
Last year, about two-thirds of India
experienced heatwave conditions with unusually high temperatures. Similarly,
unusually cold winter too. Do you attribute this to climate change?
It is definitely a sign
of climate change.
The Intergovernmental
Panel for Climate Change report mentions that in a climate change scenario, we
expect more extreme weather conditions such as hotter summer days and colder
winter days.
And what we see today are
the same things. So, we can say what we are experiencing today is a sign of
climate change.
Earlier, for example,
three decades ago, we had a normal and then the extremes. And those extremes
have become today's normal.
Recent climate models suggest that
Earth's climate would be 5.3 degrees hotter by the end of the century.
When even a 2-degree temperature rise could lead to the sea
level rising, coral reefs dying and water becoming scarce in some parts of the
world, how scary is the scenario?
It is a very scary
scenario. These are climate model projections for the future.
It is certain that there
will be some degree of rising in temperature in the future. It can be 4, 5 or even 6
degrees.
It might happen, but we
do not know the exact number for sure. These are model projections and there
are uncertainties too.
Yes, if the rise is above
2 degrees, it is still a scary situation, which is why scientists are working
to fight climate change, how to mitigate the effects and coming up with
adaptation strategies.
International scientific
bodies and policymakers are also working in this direction and conducting
many awareness programs too.
Though we do not want
this to happen, it may happen. That is what the models are suggesting.
It is also said that sea-level rise results in the water becoming scarce in some parts of the world...
It has already been
happening.
For example, studies have
shown that the sea level along the Indian coast has risen by 8.5 cm in the
past 50 years, with an average increase of about 1.7 mm/year.
In India, water scarcity
is a big problem now. There was a time when we had water in the wells and
rivers, and water bodies had water even in summer.
Now, the situation is
completely different; wells and rivers dry up by the end of winter or early
spring in some parts of India.
It is a fact that it is
happening, and a rise in temperature has a role in it and also climate change.
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