Scientists who study the monsoons tell us that they are beginning to make that distinction between 'normal' monsoons and what is now showing up in terms of abnormal extreme rain events, notes Sunita Narain
In 2014, there has been no respite from this annual cycle. But something new and strange is indeed afoot.
Each year, the floods are growing in intensity.
Each year, the rain events get more variable and more extreme.
Each year, economic damages increase -- and once again, development gains are lost in one season of flood or bad drought.
Scientists now say conclusively that there is a difference between weather and its natural variability and climate change, a pattern brought about by human emissions that is heating up the atmosphere faster than normal.
Scientists who study the monsoons tell us that they are beginning to make that distinction between 'normal' monsoons and what is now showing up in terms of abnormal extreme rain events.
This, remember, when the monsoons are an extremely capricious and confounding natural event, hard to predict and even harder to pin down.
But, even then, scientists can find the change.
All this is further complicated by the fact that multiple factors affect the weather and another set of multiple factors affects its severity and impact.
In other words, the causes of devastation following extreme events -- like droughts or floods -- are often complicated, and involve mismanagement of resources and poor planning.
For instance, we know floods of the sort that are currently ravaging parts of Northern India are caused by unusually high rainfall.
But it is also clear we have destroyed drainage in floodplains through mismanagement.
We build embankments believing we can control the river, only to find the protection broken.
Worse, we build habitations on the floodplains.
Similarly, urban India is mindless about drainage: Storm water drains are either clogged, full of garbage and sewage, or just do not exist.
Our lakes and ponds have been eaten away by real estate, since land is what the city values, not water.
In all this, what happens when extreme rainfall events happen? The city drowns.
This makes for a double whammy:
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