Relevance: GS3 – Climate Change & Disaster Management; GS2 – Global Climate Governance
Source: The Hindu; IPCC & WWA frameworks

As climate-induced extreme events rise in frequency and intensity, countries are increasingly asking whether specific disasters can be linked to specific greenhouse gas emitters.
This emerging field — climate attribution science — is reshaping global debates on climate justice, liability, insurance, and Loss & Damage under the UNFCCC.

What is Attribution Science? 

Attribution science studies how much climate change contributed to the intensity or likelihood of a particular event—such as a heatwave, cyclone, or flood.

Types of Attribution

Type

What it StudiesDifficulty Level

Example

Event AttributionDid climate change make the event more likely/intense?EasierEurope 2022 heatwave → 10x more likely
Source AttributionHow much did specific countries/companies contribute?Very hardEmissions traced to top fossil fuel firms

Tools used: climate models, counter-factual modelling, probability analysis, paleoclimate records, and real-time satellite/IMD data.

Why Linking Disasters to Emitters is Difficult

Despite rapid progress, attribution faces key limitations:

Scientific Challenges

  • Multiple drivers influence disasters: topography, sea-surface temperatures, land-use.
  • Data gaps: India lacks high-resolution long-term datasets for many regions.
  • Cyclones & floods are harder to attribute than heatwaves (which show clearer statistical signals).

Legal Challenges

  • Courts require direct causal links, whereas attribution works in probabilities.
  • Liability for historical emitters is still evolving and not recognized uniformly.

Political Challenges

  • Attribution can determine who pays in Loss & Damage negotiations — a highly sensitive issue.
  • Developed countries often resist liability frameworks.

Why Attribution Still Matters

Even with limitations, attribution science is crucial for developing nations:

1. Climate Finance & Loss and Damage

Attribution helps quantify the role of emissions, strengthening demands under the Loss & Damage Fund (CoP28 onwards).

2. Disaster Preparedness

States can use attribution to design heat action plans, cyclone zoning, and infrastructure codes.

3. Insurance & Risk Pricing

Insurance companies use attribution to evaluate climate-related risk profiles.

4. Legal Accountability

Cases like Lliuya vs RWE (Germany) show courts beginning to use attribution evidence.

Way Forward

  • Build dedicated attribution research centres in IMD, IITs & IISERs.
  • Strengthen automatic weather stations and high-resolution satellite monitoring.
  • Integrate attribution into State Disaster Management Plans (SDMPs).
  • Use attribution evidence to negotiate fair climate finance.

One-line Wrap: Attribution science cannot assign blame with certainty, but it is becoming a powerful tool for holding major emitters accountable and strengthening climate justice.

Mains Qn: “How can attribution science strengthen climate justice and Loss & Damage claims for developing nations? Discuss its scientific and ethical challenges in the Indian context.”

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