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Relevance: GS Paper III (Environment & climate change; disaster management) and GS Paper I (urbanisation) | Source: The Indian Express (Explained)

As a harsh heatwave grips India — Piduguralla (Andhra Pradesh) touched 47.6°C and the monsoon is set to reach Kerala by 26 May — an Indian Express analysis warns of a quieter danger: hotter nights, which may harm health even more than hot days.

1. What the news says

  •         Cool nights let the body recover. When nights stay hot, there is no relief, especially in small, poorly ventilated homes.
  •         India is about 0.7°C warmer (1901-2018). By 2100, days may rise 4.7°C but nights may rise 5.5°C — so nights are heating faster.
  •         A Climate Trends study in Chennai found people sleeping above 32°C, sometimes 35°C.
  •         The Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect: concrete and roads soak up heat by day and release it at night, so city centres stay 4-6°C hotter than the outskirts.

Fig: The classic urban heat island shape — the city core stays hottest at night (schematic).

2. Why hot nights are dangerous

  •         In Ahmedabad, daily deaths rise from about 100 to 265 when the night temperature crosses 30°C.
  •         Most Heat Action Plans (HAPs) — in 23-plus states — focus only on declared heatwaves, not everyday extreme heat.
  •         The poor, outdoor workers and the elderly suffer most. Ahmedabad’s 2013 HAP was India’s first.

UPSC Value Box

Term / Provision / Body Simple meaning & how it is used
Urban Heat Island A city much hotter than nearby villages because of buildings, roads, vehicles and waste heat.
Heat Action Plan (HAP) A city/state plan with warnings, cooling shelters, changed work hours and long-term steps.
Wet-bulb temperature Heat plus humidity together; values near 35°C for long can be deadly for the body.
Passive cooling Cool/white roofs, shade and air-flow that cut indoor heat without using power.

 3. The way forward

  •         Update HAPs to cover heat that is round-the-clock and indoors, not just declared heatwaves.
  •         Spread cool/white roofs, green cover and water bodies; use building codes like the Eco-Niwas Samhita.
  •         Provide cooling shelters, ORS and shifted work hours; consider making heat a notified disaster.

Conclusion: As cities grow and the planet warms, India must treat heat as an all-day, indoor and night-time threat — the key to safe, climate-ready cities.

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. “Rising night-time heat and the urban heat island are turning Indian cities into health hazards.” Suggest steps to build urban heat resilience. (15 marks, 250 words)

Answer hints:

  •         Intro: The focus shifts from daytime heatwaves to deadlier hot nights.
  •         Body: How UHI works, Ahmedabad death data, gaps in Heat Action Plans, who suffers most.
  •         Value-add: Ahmedabad HAP 2013, cool roofs, wet-bulb temperature, Eco-Niwas Samhita.
  •         Conclusion: Treat heat as a disaster; design cooler, fairer cities.

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