In News
- United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) recently presented the Drought in Numbers, 2022 report at the ongoing 15th Conference of Parties (CoP15) which highlighted India’s vulnerability to droughts.
- The report assessment analysed droughts and their impacts on life and livelihood over 122 years covering 196 countries.
Highlights of the Report
- Indian scenario:
- India has featured in the assessment as one of severely drought-impacted countries.
- Nearly two-thirds of the country suffered drought during 2020-2022.
- India’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) reduced by 2 to 5 percent between 1998 and 2017 due to severe droughts in the country.
- Many parts of India fall under the list of regions that are vulnerable to drought globally.
- Geographically, India’s drought vulnerability compares with that of sub-Saharan Africa.
- India features on the Global Drought Vulnerability Index, which is part of the assessment.
- India has featured in the assessment as one of severely drought-impacted countries.
- Global scenario:
- Droughts inbetween 1998 and 2017 caused economic losses of approximately $124 billion.
- The number and duration of droughts around the world have increased by an alarming 29% since 2000.
- An entire new generation is growing up being “water scarce”.
- Climate change alone will cause 129 countries to experience an increase in drought exposure in the next few decades.
- The report notes that women and girls in emerging and developing countries may spend up to 40 per cent of their caloric intake fetching water.
COP15 of UNCCD
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What is Drought?
- Drought is a prolonged dry period in the natural climate cycle that can occur anywhere in the world.
- It is a slow-onset disaster characterized by the lack of precipitation, resulting in a water shortage.
- In recent decades, drought has emerged as one of the biggest drivers of human life loss and economic loss among weather-related disasters.
- By 2030, or in the next eight years, drought will potentially displace an estimated 700 million people worldwide.
Effects of the increasing droughts
- Environmental Impacts:
- Losses or destruction of fish and wildlife habitat
- Lack of food and drinking water for wild animals
- Increased stress on endangered species or even extinction.
- Increase in disease in wild animals.
- Migration of wildlife.
- Lower water levels in reservoirs, lakes, and ponds; loss of wetlands
- More wildfires
- Wind and water erosion of soils
- Poor soil quality
- Social impacts:
- Health problems because of low water flows, poor water quality and dust
- Threat to public safety and loss of human life due to an increased number of forest and range fires
- Reduced incomes
- Human migrations
- Economic impacts:
- Most affected would be agriculture and allied industries.
- Rise in the prices of foodstuffs and overall inflation.
Way Forward
- The Ministry of Water Resources is involved in drought management mainly on policy guidelines, monitoring and technical and financial assistance.
- Integrated farming systems and non-agricultural developments may also be considered for livelihood support and poverty alleviation.
- Policy intervention is also made facilitating relaxation in project clearances, funding etc. for drought-prone areas.
- The Integrated Drought Management Programme (IDMP) and its partners have adopted three pillars of drought management:
- Drought monitoring and early warning systems to determine drought status.
- Vulnerability and impact assessment to determine who and what are at risk and why.
- Mitigation, drought preparedness, and response to set out actions and measures to mitigate drought impacts and to prepare to respond to drought emergencies.
Source: DTE, TH
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