Media reaction: South Asia’s 2022 heatwave and the role of climate change
For weeks, blistering heat has swept across India, Pakistan and other parts of Asia – leaving millions of people struggling with severe impacts.
The extreme heat first began in early March, with temperatures reaching above 47C in India by the end of April and 49.5C in Pakistan in May.
Across south Asia, the sweltering temperatures have been linked to an uptick in heat-related deaths, wheat crop failures, power outages and fires – with poor and marginalised communities particularly affected.
Climate change – largely driven by the burning of fossil fuels – has contributed to an increase in the frequency and severity of heatwaves in every world region, including South Asia, according to the world’s leading climate authority.
In this article, Carbon Brief examines how the media has covered the spring heatwaves in India, Pakistan and other parts of Asia, including an analysis of how different titles reported on the role of climate change.
- What is happening with heatwaves in Asia?
- What are the impacts of the extreme heat?
- What role has climate change played in the heatwaves?
- What has the media response been in India and internationally?
§ What is happening with heatwaves in Asia?
Parts of central, south and western Asia, including India and Pakistan, first began experiencing extreme heat in March, the Washington Post reported.
India’s Meteorological Department (IMD) said March maximum temperatures were at their highest in 122 years in the country, according to the newspaper.
At the same time, it added, Pakistan “had the highest worldwide positive temperature anomaly during the month of March, meaning the margin between observed temperatures and averaged temperatures there was bigger than anywhere else across the globe”.
Brutal & record breaking heat is testing power and health infrastructure to the limit in some of the most densely populated places on the planet.
— Scott Duncan (@ScottDuncanWX) April 29, 2022
The heat in Southern & Western Asia for March & April really stands out for both longevity and intensity. pic.twitter.com/ebYNPLkrz8
The arrival of heat in India in March is “unusually early”, Associated Press reported, noting that the country’s summer months are considered to be April, May and June.
Northwest India, including the capital territory Delhi, was particularly affected by the March heat, according to the Wire.
Quartz India added that 2022 is the second year in a row where March temperatures have been unseasonably high across the country, with 2021 recording the third hottest March on record.
India Today reported that the IMD considers an area to be experiencing a heatwave if maximum temperatures exceed 40C in lowland regions, or at least 30C in the highlands, for at least two consecutive days.
A heatwave is also declared if temperatures are 4.5-6.4C above average, with temperatures 6.4C above normal classified as a “severe heatwave”, according to the publication.
It noted that the threshold for heatwaves was much higher in India than the UK. (In March, the UK’s Met Office raised its threshold for heatwaves from 27C to 28C in the warmest parts of the country.)
A scientist at IMD told India Today that the thresholds differ because “different countries have different climate conditions”. He added:
“The Indian sub-continent has a tropical climate with high temperatures. Therefore, in countries like India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka heatwaves [are] declared at higher temperatures compared to that of the UK.”
The heat continued into early April, with parts of India and Pakistan experiencing 42.6C and 43C, respectively, in the first week of the month.
At the same time, other parts of Asia sweltered in unusual heat. Temperatures in Uzbekistan reached 30-33C, 8-10C above average for early April, according to the Third Pole.
Meanwhile, Ashgabat, the capital of Turkmenistan, experienced temperatures of 36.6C – 6C higher than the previous record for this date, set in 1991, the Third Pole reported.
By 8 April, seven Indian cities were experiencing temperatures above 44C, the Hindustan Times reported, with Kandla in Gujarat experiencing 45C heat.
The above-40C heat continued to engulf India throughout April, with northern and eastern states – including West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand and Odisha – particularly affected, Telegraph India reported.
On the last day of April, temperatures in Jacobabad, Pakistan hit 49C – the first recording of 49C heat in the northern hemisphere this year, the Guardian reported.
Just in ! Last day of April has witnessed the temperature reaching 49.0C at Jacobabad,Pakistan. First 48C and 49C in the Northern Hemisphere of 2022. 48.0C also at Moen Jo Daro. More updates later with more monthly records falling in India…Stay tuned. pic.twitter.com/A4e6Fkyllh
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) April 30, 2022
And temperatures in Pakistan climbed higher still – with Nawabshah hitting 49.5C on 1 May, Axios reported.
Meanwhile, in India, temperatures in Banda, Uttar Pradesh, reached 47.2C on 29 April – a record for the month in the city, Axios said. Other such records were set on 30 April in Gurgaon, Chandigarh and Dharamshala. The month as a whole is likely to be the hottest April on record for northwestern India, it added.
On 2 May, the Hindustan Times reported that the heat is likely to subside in most parts of India this week, with the IMD predicting stormy weather in Delhi, eastern and northeastern states in the coming days.
Abatement of Heat wave conditions over most parts of the country.
— India Meteorological Department (@Indiametdept) May 2, 2022
Thunderstorm/gusty winds very likely over Northwest India till 04th may; over East India & south Peninsular India till 06th May and over Northeast India till 03rd May, 2022. pic.twitter.com/T7e4zSswxR
And Reuters reported that India’s monsoon rains – which typically bring relief after the hot summer months – are expected to be “average” this year.
On 12 May, UK’s Met Office forecasted that the “brutal heatwave that enveloped parts of southern Asia since the end of April looks set to intensify”.
On 14 May, temperatures in Pakistan’s Jacobabad rose to 51C, setting a global heat record for 2022.
Bloomberg reported that on 15 May, government tankers meant to deliver water to slums in southwestern Delhi had been cancelled on a day when temperatures touched 41C.
The next day, Mungeshpur in northwestern Delhi hit 49.2C, making it the hottest place in India, the Hindustan Times reported.
§ What are the impacts of the extreme heat?
Public health
On 25 April, the IMD issued heatwave warnings over several districts of West Bengal, warning residents to avoid prolonged heat exposure.
“Recognise the signs of heat stroke, heat rash or heat cramps, such as weakness, dizziness, headache, nausea, sweating and seizures. If you feel faint or ill, see a doctor/ hospital immediately,” the bulletin said.
By the afternoon of 28 April, heat-related watches were “in effect in all but a few of India’s 28 states, encompassing hundreds of millions of people and most of the country’s major cities,” the New York Times reported.
Hospitals quickly began to fill up, as people succumbed to the heat. The Financial Times quoted Dr Madhav Thombre, a general practitioner based in Mumbai, who said:
“We are seeing many cases of heat exhaustion, dysentery, body ache – and the number of viral fever cases have increased too since the last two weeks.”
“Poorer women are particularly vulnerable to heat stress because they tend to work from home without air conditioning, while they also cook, which is hot work, and gather provisions and water from outside the house,” the Independent added.
Meanwhile, the Guardian and IFL Science reported that the heat posed a particular danger for people in India and Pakistan practising Ramadan, who do not eat or drink during the day.
Writing in Climate Home News, Delhi resident Sapna Verma said “the heat in Delhi is unbearable”. In the article, Verma described falling ill after walking 2km in the mid-afternoon sun. She continued:
“A couple of days later, returning from the office, I took a cycle rickshaw, pulled by a man who must have been in his mid-40s. Throughout the 15-minute ride to my home, the rickshaw puller, a Muslim, kept quiet. But while waiting at a red light he said he would not be able to maintain his Ramadan fast until evening because of the heat.”
On 3 May, Reuters reported that “India’s western state of Maharashtra has registered 25 deaths from heat stroke since late March, the highest toll in the past five years”.
Similarly, on April 29, Gulf News reported that “Pakistan’s climate change ministry issued a heatwave alert in all provinces and advised people and authorities to take precautionary measures”.
Down To Earth reported on heat’s impact on mental health in the central Indian state of Jharkhand that “has recorded 11 heatwave days this year”. The story quoted Dr Basudeb Das from the Central Institute of Psychiatry (CIP) in Ranchi, who said:
“One standard deviation of temperature increase leads to a [4%] increase in interpersonal violence and 14% increase in group violence. High-risk behaviours also increase during heat waves. Evidence has shown that having a pre-existing psychiatric illness can triple the risk of death during a heatwave.”
Meanwhile, the Conversation reported on the working hours lost due to the heat. “It’s become impossible to work after 10 o’clock in the morning,” Sunil Das – a rickshaw puller in Noida on the outskirts of Delhi – told Quartz. The piece continued:
“The searing heat has forced outdoor workers like Das to change their working hours. ‘I head back home after 10 and resume in the evening when the heat has subsided a bit,’ Das said. ‘It has reduced my earnings, but what alternative do I have?’”
In the eastern state of Odisha, people set up stalls at prominent public places to offer water to passersby, Reuters reported. The Odisha state government announced the closure of Anganwadi centres, colleges and universities for five days from 27 April, according to Times Now.
Elsewhere, the Bengal government advised all state primary schools to shift school hours to the morning to avoid the heat, the Times of India reported.
On 12 May, India’s education ministry issued guidelines for schools to combat the ill effects of the ongoing heatwave, teleSUR reported, urging schools to “reduce hours, relax uniform norms and restrict outdoor activities”.
Power outages
As millions turned to air conditioning to keep cool, India’s electricity demand touched a record high in April, Reuters reported.
Manufacturers posted record growth sales of residential air conditioning units for April, according to Business Standard. In addition, the Economic Times of India reported that manufacturers of air conditioners and refrigerators increased their production from 60-70% capacity to full capacity. However, the Hindu added that increased demand for air conditioning units may also lead to shortages and price increases. Time reported that “what AC units are running are belching hot air into streets, worsening the urban heat island effect” and that “environmentalists are calling for a fundamental rethink of how India builds its cities”.
Meanwhile, the Financial Times reported that rising demand for air conditioning was “worsening a critical shortage of the coal that is used to generate power for New Delhi and other nearby cities”. This triggered “the worst power crisis in more than six years”, said Reuters.
The Daily Telegraph reported that authorities in Delhi warned on 28 April that the city would see power cuts across essential services over the weekend, including in hospitals and on its metro trains, due to record levels of residential power demand.
That day, Bloomberg reported that India had cancelled some passenger trains to allow the faster movement of coal to power plants. “Coal reserves at India’s power plants have declined almost 17% since the start of this month and are barely a third of the required levels,” the outlet said.
On 4 May, the Financial Times reported that India has plans to boost coal production to “record highs” in response to the power crunch. Meanwhile, Bloomberg also reported that states including Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh were forced to implement eight-hour blackouts.
The Economist reported that the “shortage has even reached posh parts of Delhi, whose pampered residents are usually insulated from many of the discomforts suffered by their compatriots”. BBC News reported that a survey of more than 21,000 people in 322 districts found that “two in three households said they were facing power outages”. Energy and natural resources expert Dr Rahul Tongia told the outlet that “it is not that India is running out of coal in an absolute sense. We are essentially facing a stockpile problem, and it is not new”.
In Jammu and Kashmir, “unscheduled and prolonged power cuts during [Ramadan] have left citizens distraught”, noted the Hindustan Times. And India’s Economic Times reported on power cuts of up to 12 hours in Pakistan to reduce stress on the national power system.
On 6 May, the Indian government invoked emergency “national interest” powers in the country’s Electricity Act, ordering all imported-coal based power plants to run in spite of high imported coal prices of $140 per tonne, the Economic Times reported. The move, said the story, would help kick-start non-operational units of Tata Power and Adani Power’s imported coal plants.
On 10 May, the Economic Times reported that the shortage is pushing companies to buy stranded coal plants whose firms are facing bankruptcy proceedings.
In an interview with the paper on 12 May, India’s power minister said:
“Our per capita emissions are one-third of the world average, we don’t have to take any action as far as reduction of emissions is concerned. if you are asking me to compromise with the availability of power for my growth, sorry.”
On 11 May, Reuters reported that India has allowed coal mines to step up production by up to 50% without seeking feedback from locals or having to assess new impacts.
According to the latest government press release, the power minister wrote letters to the states of Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka and West Bengal to “express concern” that their generation companies had “either not started or not completed” the process for importing coal. He asked that they “take immediate steps to import coal to meet their requirement during Monsoon season.”
The Hindustan Times added: “In Jammu and Kashmir, unscheduled and prolonged power cuts during [Ramadan] have left citizens distraught.” Meanwhile, the Economic Times of India reported power cuts of up to 12 hours in Pakistan to reduce stress on the national power system.
On 2 May, the In Pakistan, the News International reported on 2 May reported that residents of the Nawabshah town of Sindh were facing unannounced hours-long power outages. Due to high fuel costs, citizens were unable to use generators for domestic power production, the paper added.
“The sweltering heat and unannounced power cuts during the month of Ramadan made the almost 15-hour fasting even more challenging…The power shortfall reached 7,468MW, resulting in long hours of about 6 to 18 hours of power outages a day in several regions of rural and urban Pakistan,” according to Gulf News.
The paper added that the country’s power division has injected an additional 2,500MW of electricity into the power system in an effort to end the power cuts.
A combination of extreme temperatures and hot, dry winds across north-Indian planes also “caused scores of unusual farm fires in food-bowl states over the past two weeks, destroying swathes of harvest-ready wheat crops in at least four”, according to a separate report by the Hindustan Times.
We are receiving a lot of reports on #Fire Outbreak (In Standing Wheat Crops) from various parts of #Haryana due to Strong winds in the state, spreading very quickly.
— Weatherman Navdeep Dahiya (@navdeepdahiya55) April 25, 2022
This video of massive crop fires from Bithmada (#Hisar). @cmohry @dcmohry @ndmaindia farmers need help!
1/2 pic.twitter.com/vCCst7S0Wn
Food security
The Financial Express said that wheat outputs will be at least 10% below initial estimates.
And the Statesman added that the Punjab government sought to relax rules on the “normal appearance of grain”, in view of the “shrivelled” grains that were being harvested.
Meanwhile, Reuters reported in early May that, due to the heat, “India’s wheat output looks likely to fall in 2022 after five consecutive years of record harvests”. The Guardian added that water shortages also affected farmers, forcing them to “use water sparingly”.
This comes at a time when India is “counting on a bumper crop to tap an export market left struggling with a gap in supply due to the Ukraine war,” the Hindustan Times said.
Similarly, Gulf News reports that “Pakistani farmers face the dual threat of enduring severe hot conditions on the job and heatwaves affecting the quality of crops”.
On 4 May, Bloomberg reported that the Indian government is now “considering limiting wheat exports” to safeguard domestic supplies.
Elsewhere, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi warned that high temperatures are also causing fires to break out more frequently in “jungles, important buildings and in hospitals”, Reuters reported.
And gases emitted by a landfill site at Bhalswa in Delhi spontaneously combusted on 26 April – emitting “a thick layer of toxic smog across the city”, according to the Daily Telegraph.
In a piece entitled, “Delhi is a blazing hot, smoke-filled hellscape”, Quartz reported that the fumes “worsened Delhi’s air quality, already among the worst in the world”.
#WATCH: Delhi | Smoke emission continues from the fire at Bhalswa landfill site which broke out on April 26. Visuals from this morning. pic.twitter.com/zu3BYSS5MF
— ANI (@ANI) April 29, 2022
Meanwhile, as the waters warmed, fisheries began to see smaller yields – reducing profits for Mumbai’s 40,000 fish sellers, Reuters reported.
Flood risk
Around seven million people are currently at risk of flash flooding from rapidly melting glaciers, reported Reuters. The government of Pakistan told provincial disaster management authorities to prepare urgently for the risk of flash flooding in northern mountainous provinces.
On 7 May, the “historic” Hassanabad bridge in northen Pakistan’s Gilgit-Baltistan region was washed away by floods after the Shishper glacier “reportedly started melting due to the heat”, the Independent reported.
The glacial floods left “thousands of locals and tourists” travelling on the Karakoram highway stranded and reportedly “swept away two hydropower projects, submerged houses, agricultural land and water supply channels”.
The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) told the Express Tribune that in the past 20 days, water volume increased by 40% in the Shisper glacier lake, “mainly triggered” by “abrupt temperature rise in the northern areas”.
“We were able to divert families and people, but this is showing us how real and dangerous climate stress is for Pakistan, it’s quite literally here and now,” Pakistan’s newly appointed federal minister for climate change Sherry Rahman told the BBC World Service Newshour radio programme:
“The sad part of the story is that we are one of the lowest emitters in the world, and yet we are experiencing the ravages of an almost existential shift in climate patterns and are a living example of all the crises that can erupt.”
Commenting on the incident, a Times of India columnist wrote that “mindless construction would have disastrous consequences in this ecologically fragile area”, saying that the Karakoram highway that connects to China “is being converted into an economic corridor…which would involve” upgrading it into an all-weather expressway along with the “laying of oil and gas pipelines”.
Last month, the Hindustan Times reported that India’s environment ministry sought to exempt “sensitive” highway projects in its border regions from seeking an environment clearance.”
Finally, around seven million people are currently at risk of flash flooding from the rapidly melting glaciers – and the government of Pakistan told provincial disaster management authorities to prepare urgently for the risk of flash-flooding in northern mountainous provinces, according to a separate Reuters story.
Extreme heat grips #India and #Pakistan@indiametdept: temperatures on 27 April were 43-45°C, will rise in next 2 days@pmdgov: Temperatures in parts of #Pakistan are 5-7°C above normal.
— World Meteorological Organization (@WMO) April 28, 2022
Rapidly melting snow and ice risks triggering glacier lake outburst floods#ClimateChange pic.twitter.com/MZBceD9ati
§ What role has climate change played in the heatwaves?
The IMD defines four climatological seasons, with the “pre-monsoon” summer season stretching from March to May and ending with the onset of the southwest monsoon in early June.
Summers in India “have always been gruelling”, according to BBC News – “especially in the northern and central regions”. The outlet noted that “heatwaves are common in India”, but that “summer began early this year” with the onset of heatwaves in March.
The season’s first heatwave was declared on 11 March, according to Down to Earth, an Indian environmental publication.
Dr Naresh Kumar, a senior scientist at the IMD, told BBC News that the current heatwave is attributable to “local atmospheric factors”, such as persistent anticyclones and weaker-than-usual “western disturbances” – storms that originate in the Mediterranean and bring rainfall to India.
The Washington Post explained that “a dome-like ‘ridge’” of high pressure in the atmosphere “eradicates cloud cover and deflects storm systems to the north…allow[ing] sunshine to pour in unobstructed, heating the antecedent dry air”. (A similar mechanism was at play during last year’s “heat dome” event that baked the Pacific north-west region of the US and Canada.)
Delhi “failed to see a single rainy day” in March, following a record-wet January and an abnormally wet February, the Hindustan Times reported. It added that only “weak and feeble” western disturbances made their way across the country’s northern plains. It added:
“Not only did these [western disturbances] fail to bring rainfall, but sufficient cloud cover, too – one that can provide a slight cooling effect.”
The New Scientist reported that this heatwave is “notable” because the world is currently in a La Niña state, which, it explained, “usually has a cooling effect globally”. It pointed out that the previous records, set in 2010, occurred during an El Niño year, when global temperatures tend to be boosted.
Axios called the heatwave a “climate change-fueled event”, noting that studies have demonstrated “clear causal links” between heatwave intensity and climate change.
(There is a strong consensus among climate scientists that heatwaves, in general, are worsening due to climate change.)
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Sixth Assessment Report (AR6), released last August, concluded that it is virtually certain that “the frequency and intensity of hot extremes (including heatwaves) have increased and those of cold extremes have decreased on the global scale from 1950”.
As Carbon Brief reported at the time, the AR6 report also said that “dangerous heat stress thresholds will be crossed more often across much of Asia – especially in the south”.
In a news release, the World Meteorological Organization wrote that “it is premature to attribute the extreme heat in India and Pakistan solely to climate change”. However, the statement continued, the heatwave is “consistent with what we expect in a changing climate”.
The heatwave has stretched beyond “typical hot spots” in India’s northwest and southeast to “regions that aren’t used to seeing so much extreme heat”, according to the MIT Technology Review. The article quoted University of California, Irvine climate researcher Prof Amir AghaKouchak, who said: “It’s part of a broader climate-change signal”.
AghaKouchak also told the outlet that there is “very high confidence” in the role of climate change in worsening heatwaves.
Dr Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London’s Grantham Institute for Climate Change, tweeted that researchers are “still working on answering how large the role of climate change in the ongoing heatwave in South Asia is”.
We’re still working on answering how large the role of climate change in the ongoing heatwave in South Asia is, but here is how the results will be useful beyond assessing current impacts & inform adaptation to extreme heat. https://t.co/QTS0QPlY6X pic.twitter.com/epCXxz7q55
— Dr Friederike Otto (@FrediOtto) May 2, 2022
Otto and several colleagues published an essay in the journal Climatic Change this week, in which they wrote that “whether today’s most impactful heatwaves could have occurred in a pre-industrial climate…is fast becoming an obsolete question”.
Instead, they argued, attribution science should turn its focus to “inform adaptation decision-making in the face of unprecedented future heat”.
Writing in the Hindustan Times, former secretary of India’s ministry of Earth sciences Dr M Rajeevan Nair pointed out that “unless we do an in-depth attribution study, it is tough to attribute a heatwave event to human influence, [but] [r]ecent heatwaves in March and April in north India are in line with IPCC’s projections”.
Meanwhile, a rapid attribution analysis by the UK Met Office has found that the chances of a record-breaking heatwave in north-west India and Pakistan has been made “100 times more likely” because of climate change, reported BBC News. The analysis focused on April and May in 2010, which saw the highest combined average April and May temperature since 1900. According to the findings, a heatwave exceeding “such extreme temperatures would occur only once every 312 years” without human-caused warming, but are now expected once every three years in the current climate.
And “by the end of the century, increasing climate change is likely to drive temperatures of these values on average every year”, said Dr Nikos Christidis, who produced the study, in a press release.
While the rapid study itself has not been peer-reviewed, the methods underpinning it have been, the Met Office’s press team clarified to Carbon Brief:
“Using this process we are able to develop quick results, but we don’t produce a scientific paper for each time we invoke the system as the process itself is subject to peer review.”
§ What has the media response been in India and internationally?
According to the University of Colorado’s Media and Climate Change Observatory – which monitors 126 news sources across print, radio and TV in 58 countries – coverage of global warming and climate change by Indian print media sources increased 22% from February to March.
Carbon Brief analysed newspaper frontpages in March and April and found that the Indian print media’s response in South Asia to the heatwave was initially muted, picking up significantly in late April as impacts gained more attention worldwide and nationally.
It’s not even dominating the news in India, by the looks of it. https://t.co/drwtEuChXg
— Aruna Chandrasekhar (@aruna_sekhar) April 26, 2022
As of 26 April, the country’s most-read English language daily, the Times of India, had not featured the heatwave on its frontpage. (Instead, Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter and Gautam Adani’s ascent to the world’s fifth richest person were the leading stories.) Neither had the Hindu, which has a significant readership in southern India.
The Times of India later did put extreme heat on the frontpage of its Delhi edition on April 29, when temperatures touched 46C in the country’s capital.
The story featured alongside another article on a call from the Delhi authorities to central government “asking it to arrange for adequate coal supply” to keep the city’s metro services and hospitals going, amid six-hour power outages in its satellite-city, Gurgaon.
#ClimateCrisis rarely makes to the front page.Maybe when #IPCC reports come out. Today @TOIDelhi talks of #Delhi #heatwaveinIndia &peak power demand all together. India’s met demand was 204GW yest’day. @ClimateAdapt is necessary,but so is @mitigation.How can anyone adapt to 46C? pic.twitter.com/ulwTMw1Q4M
— Aarti Khosla (@a_khosla) April 29, 2022
The same day, the Hindustan Times put India’s heatwave at the front and centre of its coverage as a “special spread”.
With large parts of India in the throes of record April temperatures, today’s HT rightly reads like a Heatwave Special Edition. Let’s take it from Page 1.@jayashreenandi writes that an “anti-cyclone”, bringing in hot winds, is behind the soaring temperatures.
— Saurya Sengupta (@sauryasengupta) April 29, 2022
(🧵1/n) pic.twitter.com/MuQO1AZqtG
Additionally, the paper’s Delhi edition carried a story on how “the number of fire-related calls to the Delhi Fire Services (DFS) in April so far is over 26% more than the same period last year”.
Meanwhile, the Indian Express focused on heat advisories and the power crunch as temperatures soared.”
Digital news outlets covered the heatwave extensively, bringing to light its lesser reported aspects.
For example, Mongabay reported on how “searing heat has forced outdoor workers to change their working hours…a month before the weather bureau officially recognises the hot season”.
And the Bastion reported on why reported heatwave deaths were “just the tip of the iceberg”, counting for only “about 10% of the actual heat-related deaths”.
Several outlets, including the Wire Science, Vice News and Al Jazeera highlighted the importance of wet-bulb temperatures – “a metric that accounts for both heat and humidity” and “can perhaps most intuitively be thought of as a representation of how effectively a person sheds heat by sweating”.
The Wire described the metric as “one that connects directly to human biology, public health and governance in the era of the climate crisis”. It pointed to a study that found that “the maximum wet-bulb temperatures in parts of southeastern India and southeast Asia have already approached or crossed the 35C threshold”.
The Mumbai edition of the Hindustan Times quoted Dr Dileep Mavlankar, who heads the Indian Institute of Public Health in Gandhinagar in Gujarat:
“For coastal cities, the IMD should also publish the ‘wet bulb’ temperature during heat waves in other parts of the country. When humidity is high, a temperature of 37C can feel like 40C to the human body. You can drink a lot of water, which will prevent dehydration, but it won’t actually cool you down.”
While news coverage picked up, comment on the crisis was thin in most English-language Indian news outlets.
Jayashree Nandi, chief environment and climate correspondent at the Hindustan Times, wrote that “as temperatures rise, schools must make climate action plans”, since “for many children, school is the only escape from heat stress”.
She also urged schools to be “built or retrofitted to keep the thermal comfort of children in mind and make their commute easier” – and that “governments need to keep another issue in sight: that 1.5C breach in global warming is now imminent”.
Meanwhile, an editorial in the Hindustan Times on 12 April said that “a robust public health policy response to extreme heat events must include early warning systems, effective outreach strategies to improve community awareness, and tailored measures to reach vulnerable populations…in consultation with local communities”.
It added that “climate resilience is, in part, about asking people to think differently and see extreme heat and other climate challenges as solvable public health issues”.
An article in Bloomberg argued that “for India, the world’s poorest super-emitter, adapting to a hotter Earth is as urgent a task as cutting planet-warming emissions”.
It quoted Indian climate scientist Dr Roxy Mathew Koll, who said “we have looked at data for 70 years…the number of heatwaves is directly in response to global warming”. He called for “higher resolution data and, more importantly, long-term policies.”
In a separate opinion piece, Bloomberg columnists David Fickling and Ruth Pollard said the heatwave is “a taste of things to come as global warming push[es] India and its neighbours to levels where climate is a core threat to health”. They added that “the [Indian] government hasn’t declared a national disaster and rolled out an appropriate response will come as no surprise to those who lived through the nation’s deadly Covid-19 epidemic”.
In Climate Home News, Sapna Verma observed that “the richest 10% of Indians have smaller carbon footprints than citizens in developed countries, which bear the biggest responsibility for the situation we find ourselves in”.
While “many of the options to make the heat more tolerable involve either somebody else’s sweat or burning more fossil fuels”, she says, “there is no other way to tackle this but to join hands – rich and poor – because when climate impacts intensify, the ones with more resources won’t escape either”.
Commenting on India’s coal crunch in the Indian Express, Shalu Agrawal and Karthik Ganesan from climate thinktank Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW) urged authorities to “shock-proof India’s power sector”, given that “increasing climatic and geopolitical uncertainties underscore the need to become more efficient in the way we generate, distribute and consume energy”.
Meanwhile, Somini Sengupta, writing in her latest New York Times “Climate Forward” newsletter, asked: “Is it even possible to protect people for a future of such extreme heat?”
“You can only adapt so much. This heatwave is testing the limits of human survivability,” said Dr Chandni Singh, a researcher at the Indian Institute for Human Settlements, in an interview with CNN.
“You can only adapt so much. This heatwave is testing the limits of human survivability.” https://t.co/VYM1MA9TF7
— Greta Thunberg (@GretaThunberg) May 3, 2022
Writing in Mint, climate columnist Bibek Bhattacharya pointed out that “there isn’t much climate change denial in India…the problem is forgetfulness” and that “given India’s unique position with regards to climate threats, this is all the more galling”.
It is a view supported by research: multiple studies have found that climate scepticism is conspicuously absent in the Indian press, in contrast with the UK and US media.
A 2019 study on climate change reporting in the English-language print media in India between 2010 and 2017 found that “only 0.5% of the articles present sceptical views and 2.6% of the articles explicitly discredit climate scepticism”.
Writing in the Deccan Herald, ecologist Dr Harini Nagendra – who leads Azim Premji University’s center for climate change and sustainability – called for “long vision planning to help wean Bengaluru off unnecessary fossil fuel use, finding alternate paths to our energy security without compromising our wellbeing”. She said that “at this point, and in the weeks, months and years to follow, we, the people, need to put unceasing pressure on our governments, policymakers, community representatives – and ultimately on ourselves”.
Meanwhile in Pakistan, Dawn columnist Peerzada Salman wrote that “Pakistanis in general have yet to make [climate change] a subject worth mulling over – they have other topics to thrash out”, one being the country’s latest political crisis.
He called on authorities “to make citizens’ lives less challenging” in “the last week of the holy month of [Ramadan] when most of them are fasting”, concluding that “no government deserves to be called a government unless it contains, and shows, compassion for the people it’s been elected to govern”.
Elsewhere, BBC News received criticism on Twitter for using pictures of “kids playing” for one of its stories on the heatwave, prompting it to change the image.
Vulnerable people are dying. Crops are failing. The headline explains the devastating scale.
— Dr Adam Levy (@ClimateAdam) April 29, 2022
And the picture?? Kids playing. Ffs. pic.twitter.com/zWWtpJ0pgc
On Indian TV news, discussions over the use of loudspeakers by mosques during Ramadan rather than heatwaves dominated the top debates on some of the most widely-watched English and Hindi television channels, said Manisha Pande, executive editor of the digital media-monitoring platform NewsLaundry and host of TV Newsance, a show that analyses mainstream Indian television news.
According to her research, “most of the debates on primetime television over the last month [during Ramadan] have been on religion: the use of loudspeakers, processions taken out for Hindu versus Muslim festivals”, while the most-watched Hindi channel TV9 “has only been talking about Ukraine and Russia”.
NDTV was one of the few Indian news channels that covered the heatwave and its climate links on its “Left, Right and Centre” show on 29 April with IPCC authors Prof Krishna AchutaRao and Prof Navroz Dubash. Dubash remarked that “extreme weather events are consistent with what science is predicting, what we are seeing now is the first manifestation of climate change – not a future issue, but a here and now issue”.
While there is some research on how Indian newspapers cover climate change, there is little on the country’s TV coverage. This is despite the fact that newspaper readership is “on a slow decline while TV news is growing its already wide base”, according to the Indian Readership Survey’s last update.
While Pande thinks newspapers have done a fairly good job of reporting India’s heatwave, she said the “sustained focus on climate change is completely missing” from Indian television news channels “that operate out of the world’s most polluted capital city”. She noted that the coal shortage did make it to primetime debates, but turned into a “[he said, she said] political slugfest”. She told Carbon Brief:
“Most mainstream Indian TV coverage is driven by events and sensationalised headlines, never any focus on climate change. For heat, it’s a weather-related news update and not climate-related. I was just looking at our research for this week and it has headlines like ‘sadak pe papad bhi sek sakte hai’ [you can roast your poppadoms on the street now]. But if we’ve had the hottest month in 122 years, even if you want to sensationalise it, it should’ve been a primetime bulletin.
“It’s not just climate: unemployment, price rise, these issues don’t make it, so climate is a huge expectation. These [TV] guys inhabit a parallel universe.”
Her thoughts were echoed by young Indian climate activist Disha Ravi, who told Carbon Brief:
“Coverage around heatwaves made it mainly into a weather issue. The ones that highlighted climate change hardly touched on the causes or preventive measures. It also felt more like an FYI [for your information], instead of holding authorities accountable, which was disappointing and alarming.”