India Need to Build Climate-Resilient Cities

Syllabus: GS3/Environment

In News

  • India’s urban transformation is accelerating, with cities poised to generate new jobs and host billions of people.

The Need for Climate-Resilient Urban Futures

  • India is undergoing an unprecedented urban transformation. By 2030, cities are expected to generate over 70% of new jobs, and by 2050, nearly a billion people will reside in urban areas. 
  • This demographic shift presents both an opportunity and a challenge: while cities can be engines of innovation and growth, they are also increasingly vulnerable to climate-induced risks such as floods, heatwaves, cyclones, and water stress.

Steps toward building climate-resilient cities 

  • It includes integrated urban planning that incorporates climate risk assessments, promotes compact mixed-use development, and manages urban water through catchment-based planning.
  • Nature-based solutions focus on restoring wetlands, lakes, and mangroves, expanding urban forests, and encouraging permeable surfaces and green roofs to handle excess rainwater. 
  • Climate-responsive infrastructure involves upgrading drainage systems, installing flood warning systems, retrofitting buildings for energy efficiency and disaster resilience, and investing in solar-powered transport projects. 
  • Inclusive governance emphasizes empowering local bodies with climate mandates, engaging citizens in planning, and strengthening institutional capacity at various government levels.
  • Financing and innovation are critical, with a focus on mobilizing funds through green bonds and public-private partnerships, aligning national urban missions with climate goals, and supporting climate-tech startups and viable projects.

Challenges

  • Flooding threatens two-thirds of urban residents, with projected losses reaching $30 billion by 2070, necessitating integrated solutions such as no-build zones, improved drainage, nature-based interventions, and real-time warning systems—exemplified by Kolkata and Chennai.
  • Extreme heat, intensified by urban heat islands, demands scalable measures like cool roofs, tree canopies, and adaptive work schedules.
  • Housing Vulnerability: With over 144 million new homes and extensive infrastructure yet to be built by 2070. 
  • Transportation systems, vulnerable to flooding, require risk mapping, drainage upgrades, and alternative routing to maintain economic continuity.
  • Waste & Pollution: Inefficient municipal services contribute to poor air, water, and soil quality, undermining urban livability.

Conclusion and Way Forward

  • To address climate challenges, cities need to build institutional capacity, promote collaboration, and get the support of both the government and the citizens.
  • Early investments in adaptive infrastructure and inclusive urban planning can prevent billions in damages and save lives. 
  • Housing must be designed to withstand floods, heat, cyclones, and earthquakes, focusing on compact and forward-looking city layouts. 
  • Modernizing municipal services, such as waste-to-energy projects, will improve environmental quality and boost urban productivity. 

Source :IE

 

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