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27 Jun 2015Hindustan Times (Mumbai)KumKum Dasgupta 
[email protected]
The Karachi heat wave, which has killed more than 1,000, shows how urban 
centres are slowly becoming death trapsEarlier this week, a Karachi-based 
journalist tweeted a “heart rending” photograph of a frail old man lying on a 
road while a relative/bystander poured water on him. The man’s weather-beaten 
face had an exhausted and helpless look; it seemed as if he was about to 
succumb to the heat wave that is sweeping through the Sindh province of 
Pakistan.
Experts like Qamaruz Zaman Chaudhry, who authored Pakistan’s first National 
Climate Change Policy, believes that the heat wave in Karachi, the capital of 
Sindh, which has killed over 1,000 people, is “one of the manifestations of 
climate change”. Others have pointed to the fact that the city is suffering 
from the ‘urban heat island’ (UHI) effect, which has turned the city into a 
furnace, and this is the reason behind such a high death toll. Urban heat 
island is defined as the rise in temperature of any man-made area, resulting in 
a well-defined, distinct ‘warm island’ among the ‘cool sea’ represented by the 
lower temperature of the area’s nearby natural landscape.
The situation in Karachi has lessons for cities in India, many of which are 
also becoming urban heat islands, thanks to reckless urbanisation. Man-made 
structures which overwhelm our cities absorb solar radiation during the day, 
forming a dome of warm air over them. There is no respite even after sunset 
because the buildings form a “canopy structure that blocks heat diffusion to 
the upper atmosphere”. Along with concrete structures, heat build-up increases 
due to electrical equipment and vehicular emission. This heat build-up also 
happens because of the destruction of “heat sinks”: Lakes, sandy areas, fallow 
and scrub land. Scientists expect such urban heat waves to increase in 
frequency and intensity as cities grow.
“While the effect of UHI could be one of the factors for the high number of 
deaths in Karachi, there are other reasons such as lack of supply of water, 
awareness about heat waves and lack of shelters compounded the problem,” PG 
Dhar Chakrabarti, Distinguished Fellow, The Energy and Resource Institute, told 
me. “This lack of preparedness was also seen in India … don’t forget 2,000-plus 
died this summer here”. That Karachi, like many Indian cities, was not ready 
for the summer is clear from the statement of Sindh’s health minister JM Dahar: 
“We are launching awareness programmes ....that people must not expose 
themselves to direct heat and must drink plenty of water”. Talk about shutting 
the stable door after the horse has bolted. In both Pakistan and India, the 
poor have borne the brunt of the angry weather gods.
Two Indian states have taken the lead in tackling this problem: Ahmedabad has a 
Heat Action Plan that warns people, especially the vulnerable, on how to 
protect themselves from heat waves. The authorities install drinking water 
stations and conduct survey of all construction sites to ascertain the 
availability of drinking water and shelter for rest in afternoon for labourers 
working there. Odisha has changed its official working hours so that people can 
stay indoors during the peak heat hours.These urban heat islands could turn 
into death traps unless, as Dhar Chakrabarti said, authorities invest heavily 
in constructing green buildings, install energy-efficient equipment and 
increase green spaces.



                                          

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