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Maharashtra environment and tourism minister Aaditya Thackeray on Wednesday announced that a State Council for Climate Change has been formed after a report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) about carbon impact was presented in the cabinet meeting. Calling it a “climate emergency”, he said action plan will be prepared to deal with the challenges.
“Climate change is impacting us. IPCC report about carbon impact was presented in the cabinet today. Action plan will be prepared for climate change. We believe, this is climate emergency. No luxury of time. EV policy, Aarey forest – multiple actions have started. Interdepartmental conferences will be held,” Thackeray said.
ALSO READ: BMC Chief Believes South Mumbai’s Cuffe Parade, Nariman Point Will Disappear By 2050. Here’s Why
This comes days after Mumbai municipal commissioner Iqbal Singh Chahal made a sinister prediction and said that by 2050, a major portion of South Mumbai, including the business district of Nariman Point and state secretariat Mantralaya, will go under water due to the rising sea levels.
Speaking at the launch of Mumbai Climate Action Plan and its website at the hands of Thackeray, Chahal had said that about 70 per cent of the city’s A, B, C and D wards in South Mumbai will be under water due to climate change. He said nature was giving warnings, but if people did not “wake up” then the situation would turn “dangerous”.
Eighty per cent of the areas like Cuffe Parade, Nariman Point and Mantralaya will be under water, which means they are “going to disappear”, he said. The civic chief also said it was a matter of just 25 to 30 years as 2050 was not too far.
“We are getting warnings from nature and if we do not wake up, it will be a dangerous situation for the next 25 years. And it will not only be the next generation, but the current generation will also suffer,” Chahal said. He said Mumbai was the first city in South Asia that was preparing its climate action plan and acting on it.
“Earlier, we used to hear about climate change events like melting glaciers, but not directly affecting us. But now it has come to our doorstep,” he added. Chahal said last year for the first time in 129 years, a cyclone (Nisarga) hit Mumbai and, thereafter, in the last 15 months, there had been three cyclones. After that, on August 5, 2020, about 5 to 5.5 feet water was accumulated at Nariman Point. “There was no cyclone warning that day, but considering the parameters, it was a cyclone,” Chahal said.
Highlighting that the city had witnessed some extreme weather conditions recently, he had said that the city faced Tauktae in Mumbai and witnessed 214 mm rain on May 17, though monsoon arrived on June 6 or 7. Before June 9, Mumbai recorded 84 per cent of the June rainfall and, in July, 70 per cent of month’s average rainfall was received in just four days from July 17 to 20, he said.
Under the Mumbai Climate Action Plan (MCAP), the data assessment has identified areas and communities most vulnerable given increasing climate uncertainty, the Brihanmumbai municipal corporation (BMC) said in a release. Data from across BMC’s 37 automatic weather stations (AWS) over the past 10 years suggests that on an average, Mumbai has seen six heavy, five very heavy, and four extremely heavy rainfall days per year. And for all the rainfall that occurs during the monsoon season in Mumbai, each year, approximately 10 per cent falls under the heavy category, nine per cent very heavy, and six per cent extremely heavy.
According to the India Meteorological Department’s (IMD) classification, daily rainfall from 64.5 mm to 115.5 mm is considered ‘heavy’, 115.6 mm to 204.4 mm ‘very heavy’, and more than 204.5 mm is ‘extreme’. “The four-year period between 2017 and 2020 has seen a steady increase in the extremely heavy rainfall events. This indicates that the frequency of such extreme weather events is increasing for the city of Mumbai, especially over the past four years,” said Lubaina Rangwala, associate director, WRI India Ross Center for Sustainable Cities.
(With PTI inputs)
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