Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Climate Change is for real

The scorching summer is here.
After a brief respite of a few days, which saw a pleasant cloudy weather, the mercury is rising again. SuryaNarayan (the Sun God) is playing with great consistency, with the last few temperatures reading 44-deg Celsius, 46-deg C, and 45-deg C. At this rate, He is bound to score a half century by the end of this month.

The heat is affecting the daily life in some remarkable ways.
Clothes get dry in a matter of 30 minutes. Chapattis turn brittle like papad if left out for more than a few hours. A significant number of people are suffering from sunstrokes and sunburns. Earlier, my understanding of these two maladies was that they could be cured in a matter of hours with sufficient rehydration. However, it seems their effects can last for more than a week, with the patient suffering from repeated vomiting and headache. In fact, some major hospitals have created chambers in which the victims are kept in a specially created environment for days  to get them back to normal.


And this is true not only of Nagpur, where people are habitual to 40-deg+ temperatures (and discuss it with some pride!). The coastal regions such as Konkan and Goa too are experiencing a never-seen-before heat-wave. In Goa, the temperature usually hovers in the range of 28-deg C to 34-deg C; but these days it has regularly been touching 38-deg C mark.

The first and foremost thing that we can do..
...in our little capacity as individuals, is water conservation and water recycling. No faulty and leaking taps, no mindless overturning of buckets. It is infuriating to see people washing their cars (and even porches) on a daily basis with pure drinking water. One must pause and think before spilling each and every drop of this precious liquid.



(Photo Courtsey: Manjusha)

We need to take utmost care of our little ones and senior citizens, as they are most susceptible to heat strokes. It is better to avoid exposing them to any outdoor activity during the day time; but if it cannot be avoided (due to marriage season and such), they need to be well-covered all the time.


Animals too suffer a lot during this harsh weather. We can place a bowl of water on our terraces (for birds), or a container out in the compound (for cats and dogs).


Around five years ago,
I had read a novel named "State of Fear". In it, the author Michael Crichton had argued that the hue and cry over environment change was mostly a propaganda promoted by some vested interests to create a 'state of fear' in the public mind, with little hard evidence to support it.
Well, looking around at the scenario today, Mother Earth seems to have proved Mr. Crichton completely wrong. To believe that environment has not been remarkably -- and perhaps even irreversibly -- affected would be to live in a state of denial.


Climate change is indeed for real, and it is here to stay.