Syllabus: GS1/Society; Urbanisation
Context
- Recently, Kerala Cabinet decided to tackle the rapid urbanisation with the Kerala Urban Policy Commission (KUPC), in response to projections indicating that over 80% of Kerala will be urbanised by 2050, outpacing the country’s average.
About the Kerala Urban Policy Commission (KUPC)
- It is India’s first State-level urban commission, was set up in December 2023, with a 25-year roadmap for reimagining cities as climate-aware, people-centred ecosystems.
- It aims to build resilient, inclusive, and climate-ready cities tailored to Kerala’s unique realities, reflecting a shift from reactive governance to strategic planning.
- KUPC submitted its report in March 2025, which laid out a blueprint for:
- A digital data revolution;
- Governance reforms;
- Financial empowerment for municipalities;
- Reviving cultural and ecological identity.
Key Recommendations of the KUPC
- Climate-Responsive Planning: Hazard-based zoning integrating flood, landslide, and coastal risk maps.
- Planning that anticipates disasters rather than reacting afterward.
- Data-Driven Governance: A Digital Data Observatory at KILA to centralise LIDAR, satellite, tide, and weather data.
- Real-time intelligence accessible to every municipality.
- Financial Empowerment: Municipal bonds for major cities like Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram.
- Pooled bonds for smaller towns.
- Green fees and climate insurance to fund resilience and ensure pre-approved payouts for disasters.
- Governance Overhaul: City cabinets led by mayors, replacing bureaucratic inertia.
- Specialist municipal cells on climate, waste, and mobility.
- ‘Jnanashree’ program to embed youth tech talent in governance.
- Place-Based Economic Revival:
- Thrissur-Kochi: FinTech hub;
- Thiruvananthapuram-Kollam: Knowledge corridor;
- Kozhikode: City of literature;
- Palakkad & Kasaragod: Smart-industrial zones.
- Commons, Culture, and Care: Revival of wetlands and waterways; Protection of heritage zones.
- City health councils for migrants, gig workers, and students.
Key Innovations in Kerala’s Urban Policy
- The KUPC report and the Kerala Urban Conclave 2025 introduced several pioneering ideas like City Cabinets; Local Economic Development Departments; Green Fees; Decentralised Waste Management; and Climate-Risk Insurance & Carbon Sink Zones.
- A feedback loop where citizen stories fuel data, and data fuels policy.
- These dismantle silos in planning, finance, and governance, creating a 360° urban intelligence system.
Lessons for Other States & India
- Long-Term Vision: Planning for 25 years, not just electoral cycles.
- Stakeholder Engagement: Inclusive consultations with citizens, experts, and civil society.
- Climate Integration: Embedding resilience into every urban decision.
- Decentralised Governance: Empowering local bodies with autonomy and resources.
- Policy-Research Synergy: Linking academic insights with practical implementation.
- Other lessons include:
- Constitute time-bound urban commissions.
- Merge technical data with community knowledge.
- Institutionalise citizen dialogue through data observatories.
- Empower local bodies with fiscal tools like bonds and risk premiums.
- Embed youth and specialists in governance systems.
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