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As Temperatures Soar, the Budget Falls Short
The heat is no longer coming.
It is already here.
Across India, summers are transforming into seasons of survival. Streets shimmer under relentless temperatures, crops wither before harvest, hospitals fill with heatstroke victims, and millions of workers are forced to choose between earning a day's wage and risking their lives. Yet despite mounting evidence that extreme heat is becoming one of the nation's most dangerous climate threats, India's financial response remains fragmented, underfunded, and alarmingly inadequate.
A groundbreaking analysis titled Standing the Heat: An Analysis of Heatwave Financing in India's Union Budget reveals a troubling reality: while India is spending billions on programs that may indirectly support climate resilience, the country still lacks a dedicated national budget for heatwave preparedness, response, adaptation, and resilience-building.
The findings paint a picture of a nation standing on the frontlines of a climate emergency without the financial armor needed to withstand the storm.
A Crisis Measured in Lives, Not Degrees
India's heat crisis is no longer a future concern discussed in climate conferences and policy papers. It is a present-day emergency affecting millions.
Approximately 57 percent of India's districts, home to roughly 76 percent of the country's population, are now categorized as facing high to very high heat risk. The India Meteorological Department declared 2024 the hottest year ever recorded since measurements began in 1901. Scientists warn that heatwave days in major cities could double by 2030.
The consequences are devastating.
Heatwaves kill silently. They do not leave behind the dramatic images of floods or earthquakes, but their toll is equally deadly. Beyond fatalities, extreme heat causes mass hospitalizations, destroys livelihoods, damages agriculture, reduces productivity, disrupts education, and weakens critical infrastructure.
Researchers estimate that a single day of severe heatwave conditions across India may result in thousands of excess deaths. Yet many of these deaths remain uncounted, misclassified, or invisible in official records.
This is not merely an environmental issue.
It is a public health crisis.
A labor crisis.
An agricultural crisis.
A social justice crisis.
And increasingly, a financial crisis.
The Startling Truth: No National Heat Budget Exists
Perhaps the report's most shocking revelation is that India has no dedicated national financing mechanism specifically designed to address heatwaves.
Between Fiscal Year 2020-21 and Fiscal Year 2026-27, only around 9 to 11 percent of identified heat-relevant spending was directed toward programs considered directly relevant to heat-related risks.
The remaining 88 to 93 percent flowed through broader development schemes that only indirectly contribute to heat resilience.
In practical terms, this means India is relying largely on general development spending to confront one of the fastest-growing climate threats in its history.
Out of 130 government schemes examined across 16 ministries, only 27 were found to have direct relevance to heat-related risks and impacts.
Even more concerning, several of these programs have received minimal funding or have experienced significant budget reductions over time.
The result is a patchwork response lacking clear direction, coordination, and accountability.
Climate Leadership Without a Heat Strategy
One of the report's most striking paradoxes lies within the very ministry responsible for climate action.
The Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change serves as India's primary institution for addressing climate-related challenges. Yet it has no dedicated heat-focused scheme.
Not one.
Despite heatwaves becoming one of the country's most dangerous climate threats, the ministry continues to address heat only indirectly through broader environmental and adaptation programs.
The disconnect is profound.
The institution tasked with confronting climate risks lacks a dedicated financial instrument to address one of the most visible and deadly manifestations of climate change.
This gap symbolizes a broader challenge: heat remains everywhere in policy discussions, yet nowhere in budgetary priorities.
The Forgotten Frontline: Workers Under the Sun
No group experiences the brutality of extreme heat more directly than outdoor workers.
Construction laborers.
Farm workers.
Street vendors.
Delivery riders.
Waste pickers.
Daily wage earners.
Their livelihoods depend on exposure to conditions that are becoming increasingly dangerous.
Yet the report reveals that India has no dedicated occupational heat protection scheme.
No national heat stress compensation framework.
No comprehensive program specifically designed to protect workers from escalating heat exposure.
While several labor welfare programs exist, they were not created to address heat-related health risks and economic losses.
For millions of workers, protection remains uncertain.
As temperatures rise, so too does the vulnerability of those who can least afford to stop working.
Healthcare Systems Are Not Ready
Extreme heat is not merely uncomfortable—it is deadly.
It places enormous pressure on healthcare systems through heatstroke, dehydration, cardiovascular complications, respiratory illnesses, and other heat-related conditions.
Yet India's health financing framework remains insufficiently prepared.
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has no dedicated budgetary program focused specifically on heat emergency preparedness.
Funding for disaster preparedness within the health sector has remained modest, while utilization rates reveal implementation challenges.
Although important initiatives exist through the National Programme for Climate Change and Human Health, heat-specific health financing remains embedded within larger programs, making it difficult to track, prioritize, and strengthen.
When heat emergencies strike, preparedness cannot be an afterthought.
Lives depend on it.
Agriculture: Fighting Heat Through Insurance
Agriculture sits at the heart of India's heat vulnerability.
Rising temperatures threaten crop yields, livestock productivity, water availability, and rural livelihoods.
The report finds that while the Ministry of Agriculture manages 40 heat-relevant schemes, only three are directly linked to heat-related risks.
Most support comes through indirect mechanisms such as crop insurance, social protection, nature-based solutions, and livelihood programs.
Recent years have seen growing emphasis on social insurance programs designed to protect farmers from climate-related losses.
While these efforts strengthen resilience, they also highlight a larger reality: India's agricultural response remains focused on coping with damage rather than preventing it.
The challenge is shifting from recovery to preparedness.
Water: The Lifeline Receiving Too Little Attention
When temperatures soar, water becomes the difference between resilience and catastrophe.
Access to drinking water, groundwater security, irrigation systems, and water conservation all become critical defenses against heat stress.
Yet the report identifies significant gaps in water-sector preparedness.
While major infrastructure programs such as the Jal Jeevan Mission receive substantial allocations, spending remains heavily concentrated on infrastructure rather than capacity building, emergency preparedness, and disaster resilience.
Budget utilization has also been inconsistent.
Without stronger investment in water security, India's ability to adapt to escalating heat risks will remain constrained.
Cities Heating Up Faster Than Policies
India's cities are becoming heat traps.
Concrete landscapes absorb and retain heat, creating dangerous urban heat islands that disproportionately affect low-income communities.
Yet the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs has no dedicated urban heat action program.
No nationwide cool-roof initiative.
No dedicated urban greening fund.
No national heat shelter network.
While housing, transit, and urban infrastructure programs contribute indirectly to resilience, the absence of targeted urban heat strategies leaves millions vulnerable.
As urban populations continue to grow, this gap will become increasingly difficult to ignore.
Science Funding Drops to Zero
Perhaps one of the most alarming findings concerns scientific research.
The Ministry of Science and Technology plays a vital role in innovation, forecasting, technology development, and evidence generation.
Yet funding for its identified heat-relevant schemes has effectively dropped to zero from Fiscal Year 2025-26 onward.
At precisely the moment when climate science, innovation, and adaptation research are most needed, investment is disappearing.
This risks weakening the country's long-term capacity to understand and manage escalating heat threats.
The Gender Dimension of Heat
Heat does not affect everyone equally.
Women, children, pregnant women, the elderly, persons with disabilities, and marginalized communities often face greater exposure and fewer resources for protection.
The report highlights a critical weakness: current financing structures do not adequately address gendered vulnerabilities.
While women benefit indirectly from broader social programs involving water, health, housing, and welfare, there is no dedicated gender-responsive heat financing strategy.
As a result, many of the people most vulnerable to heat remain insufficiently protected.
A Defining Climate Test
India's heat crisis represents one of the defining climate challenges of the twenty-first century.
The country has demonstrated remarkable progress in developing Heat Action Plans and expanding climate awareness. Yet planning alone is not enough.
Preparedness requires financing.
Resilience requires financing.
Adaptation requires financing.
Lives depend on financing.
The report's authors argue that heatwaves should be formally recognized as a standalone disaster and supported through a dedicated financing mechanism within India's disaster management architecture.
Such a move would transform heat action from a fragmented collection of programs into a coordinated national priority.
The Choice Before India
Every summer is becoming hotter.
Every year brings new records.
Every delay increases the human and economic costs.
The question is no longer whether India faces a heat crisis.
The evidence is overwhelming.
The question is whether India's financial systems will evolve quickly enough to confront it.
Standing the heat is no longer about enduring rising temperatures.
It is about building a nation capable of protecting its people, safeguarding its economy, and adapting to a future where extreme heat is no longer the exception—but the new reality.
The time for treating heat as a seasonal inconvenience has passed.
It must now be treated as what it truly is:
A national emergency hiding in plain sight.

Ross is known as the Pambansang Blogger ng Pilipinas - An Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Professional by profession and a Social Media Evangelist by heart.
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