Title: Climate Change and Economic Impact on India
1Climate Change and Economic Impact on India
2Economy
- GDP (purchasing power parity) 4.156 trillion
- GDP per capita 3,800
- GDP composition by sector
- 19.9 agriculture
- 19.3 industry
- 60.7 services
- Labor force by occupation
- 60 agriculture
- 12 industry
- 28 services
https//www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world
-factbook/geos/in.html
3 35 of population live on less than 1 a
day 80 live on less than 2 a day
http//earthtrends.wri.org/povlinks/map/m_54.php
4Temperature rise (2-3.5oC)
- 9-25 loss of agriculture revenue, or 0.67 of
GDP, equivalent to 2223 million - Coastal agriculture suffers most, in western
states of Gujrat, Maharashtra, Kanataka - Reduction in yield in northwest Punjab, Haryana
- But marginal gains in West Bengal, Orissa, Andhra
Pradesh (limited evidence) -
http//www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/media/5/0/roy.pdf
Joyashree Roy, comissioned research on Stern
Review
5Sea level rise (100 cm)
- 1259 million welfare loss,
- equivalent to 0.35 GDP
- 7 million people would be displaced
- 5,764 sq km land would be lost through inundation
- 4,200 km roads destroyed
- limited evidence
http//www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/media/5/0/roy.pdf
Joyashree Roy, comissioned research on Stern
Review
6Sea level rise (100 cm)
- Island Submersion
- Sunderban Islands
- 2 out of 102 islands
- are submerged, leaving
- 10,000 people homeless
- 12 more islands are in danger of submersion
100,000 would have to be evacuated in the next
decade if trend continues
http//www.hindu.com/thehindu/mag/2006/12/10/stori
es/2006121000130400.htm http//www.terradaily.com/
reports/Rising_Sea_Levels_Engulfing_Indian_World_H
eritage_Islands_999.html
7- The Konkan Railway, between Roha and Thokur
- 760 km
- Rs 34 billion (US 745 million)
- 59 stations
- 179 major bridges (total linear waterway 20.50
km) - 1,819 minor bridges (total linear waterway 5.73
km).
http//unfccc.int/files/parties_and_observers/part
ies/application/pdf/indnc1.pdf
8India and the Kyoto Protocol
- Even though India ratified the Kyoto Protocol, we
were exempt from reducing our emissions for the
time being. - The reasoning
- About a fifth of the Carbon Dioxide in the
atmosphere was put there by human activity in the
last 150 years. Most of this human induced carbon
is the result of emissions from developed
countries since the industrial revolution.
9The Big Picture
10Our Reasoning
- India argues that since the CO2 in the atmosphere
is from the emissions of developed countries over
a long period of time, it is the responsibility
of the developed countries to do something about
it. - A few countries such as the U.S. found this
unfair and argued that each country should help
cut down on emissions regardless of how developed
a nation they were.
11India (and the World)s Loss
- The U.S. has refused to ratify the Kyoto
Protocol. - Bad because Its the biggest emitter in the
world. - Hypocritical of the U.S. to say that everyone
should do their part and then do nothing