Relevance: GS3 (Environment & Disaster Management); GS2 (Global Climate Governance)
Source: The Hindu; IPCC & WWA references

As climate-fuelled extreme events intensify—cyclones, floods, heatwaves—countries are increasingly asking: can specific disasters be scientifically linked to greenhouse gas emitters?
This science, called climate attribution, is becoming central to loss-and-damage claims, insurance, and climate justice debates.

What is Attribution Science? 

Attribution science examines whether and to what extent climate change increased the intensity or likelihood of a specific event, compared to a pre-industrial world.

Two Types of Attribution

TypeWhat it MeasuresExample
Event AttributionWhether climate change made an event more intense/more likelyHeatwaves in Europe now 10x more likely
Source AttributionQuantifying which emitters contributed to warmingLinking historical emissions of major oil companies

This field uses climate models, counterfactual modelling, probability analysis, paleoclimate data, and real-time observations.

Why Linking Disasters to Emitters is Difficult

Despite scientific advances, several challenges persist:

1. Complex causation

  • Disasters have multiple drivers: geography, land use, local infrastructure, natural variability.
  • Climate is a probability-based system, not deterministic.

2. Uneven data availability

  • Developed nations have reliable data.
  • Developing nations often lack high-resolution weather records.

3. Attribution harder for cyclones & floods

Heatwaves are easiest to attribute.
But for monsoon failures, floods, or cyclones—natural variability interferes more strongly, making attribution uncertain.

4. Legal hurdles

Courts ask: “Can we identify a specific emitter as responsible for a specific disaster?”
Science rarely offers 100% certainty, only probability ranges.

5. Political implications

Assigning blame may reshape:

  • climate finance
  • carbon liability
  • loss & damage negotiations under UNFCCC

Why Attribution Still Matters

Despite limitations, attribution science is becoming a key tool in climate justice.

Applications Emerging Globally

  • Insurance industry uses attribution to evaluate risks.
  • Courts have cited attribution studies in cases (e.g., Germany’s Lliuya vs RWE case).
  • Loss & Damage Fund reliance on attribution is growing, especially post-CoP28.
  • Helps governments frame adaptation and disaster preparedness.

India-Specific Relevance

India is among the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations.

Recent Indian examples where attribution studies helped

  • Heatwave likelihood increased by 30x (WWA study).
  • 2022 Pakistan floods—monsoon changes partly linked to emissions from top fossil fuel companies.
  • Cyclone Amphan showed enhanced intensity due to warm Bay of Bengal.

For India, attribution matters because:

  • It strengthens claims for climate finance.
  • Helps design state-level climate adaptation plans.
  • Provides scientific basis for urban planning and disaster codes.

Emerging Global Framework

Institution

Contribution

IPCCStandardises attribution methods; AR6 strengthens causal links
World Weather Attribution (WWA)Rapid attribution for severe events
UNFCCC Loss & DamageAttribution used for compensation debates

Way Forward

  • Invest in high-resolution climate data and automatic weather stations.
  • Build national attribution capability within IMD, IITs, and IISERs.
  • Integrate attribution into disaster insurance schemes.
  • Use attribution evidence in climate negotiations to demand fair financing.

Key Takeaways

  • Attribution science links specific extreme events to climate change using rigorous probability modelling.
  • Despite uncertainties, it is becoming vital for climate policy, insurance, and legal responsibility.
  • India must strengthen its scientific and institutional capacity to leverage attribution for climate justice.

One-line wrap:
Attribution science cannot assign blame with certainty, but it provides powerful evidence to hold major emitters accountable for climate-driven losses.

UPSC Mains Question:
Discuss the role of attribution science in strengthening climate justice and loss-and-damage claims for developing nations like India. What are the key scientific and ethical challenges involved?

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