The process of degradation resulting from global warming strengthen the vulnerability of all relevant climate dependant sectors affecting the economy.Countries in temperate and tropical areas are likely to have increased exposure to extreme events including forest die back...
Climate Change in IndiaFerdous Mottakin
In India, Climate Change Ranks behind Coal for DevelopmentGayathri VaidyanathanClimateWire
dry deciduous, and wet evergreen forest. Projected changes in temperature, rainfall, and soil moisture are considered at regional level for India under two scenarios, the first involving greenhouse gas forcing, and the second, sulphate aerosols. Under the former model, a general increase in tempera...
Climate ChangeHuman HealthEnvironmentNatural ResourcesMalnutritionDiarrheaThe impact of climate change has been considerably enough to threaten human health both directly and indirectly through increasing temperatures, rising sea levedoi:10.2139/ssrn.3071055Amutha, D....
The impact of climate changes in Indonesia is expected to increase the threat toward food security, human health, water availability, biodiversity, and sea level rise. Cities in the coastal regions of Indonesia have a very high vulnerability to rising sea levels. It is feared that tidal floods ...
India, the world’s third-largest polluter, is planning to balance development with environment protection as it tackles climate change.
Shifting influences of Indian Ocean Dipole and western Pacific subtropical high on annual precipitation δ18O in southern East Asia Article Open access 17 March 2025 Heat and freshwater changes in the Indian Ocean region Article 20 July 2021 Modulation of late Pleistocene ENSO strength by the ...
India has experienced significant warming over the past few decades9, which is likely to continue along with the changes in precipitation in the 21st century10. Despite the profound implications of climate change on streamflow, the linkage between climate change and hydropower production in India rema...
In combination, these changes would have increased cumulative harvest during 1966–2002 by an amount equivalent to about a fifth of the increase caused by improvements in farming technology. Climate change has evidently already negatively affected India’s hundreds of millions of rice producers and ...