Context:
Despite strong climate science capabilities, India’s climate action is constrained by a communication gap, limiting translation of scientific data into actionable governance.
Key Highlights:
- Conceptual Gap – ‘Loss and Damage’
- Internationally includes:
- Slow-onset climate impacts
- Biodiversity loss
- Erosion of social systems
- In India often understood narrowly as post-disaster compensation (haani purti).
- Underutilization of Climate Science
- India possesses:
- District-level heat projections
- Flood modelling systems
- These remain underused due to poor communication and localization.
- Governance Gap
- Narrow climate vocabulary → Limited policy imagination.
- Global commitments remain abstract without local translation.
- Example: Odisha Cyclone Preparedness
- Success linked to public trust in government alerts.
- Communication credibility as important as physical infrastructure.
- Risk Dashboard Limitations
- Technically sound but:
- Complex
- Not aligned with daily decision-making needs
- Need for Co-created Climate Communication
- Involvement of:
- Panchayat leaders
- Farmers
- Teachers
- Local journalists
- Frontline workers
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Loss and Damage:
- Recognized under UNFCCC framework.
- Refers to climate impacts beyond adaptation capacity.
- Climate Communication:
- Translation of scientific projections into usable public information.
- Disaster Preparedness:
- Early warning systems
- Evacuation protocols
- Community awareness mechanisms
- India’s climate initiatives:
- National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC)
- State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCCs).
- Importance of local language dissemination in governance delivery.
Relevant Mains Points:
GS Paper 3 – Environment
- Climate resilience depends not only on infrastructure but also on institutional trust and communication systems.
- Need to integrate scientific projections into local planning (urban planning, agriculture, school schedules).
- Addressing slow-onset climate risks like heatwaves and sea-level rise.
GS Paper 2 – Governance
- Communication failure creates a governance deficit.
- Need for decentralized, participatory communication models.
- Align climate communication with Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs).
Ethics Dimension
- Transparency and clarity in risk communication uphold public trust and accountability.
Way Forward:
- Develop a dedicated national climate communication framework.
- Localize scientific information into regional languages and cultural contexts.
- Strengthen media partnerships.
- Build trust through consistent and accurate early warning dissemination.
- Integrate climate literacy into education and governance training.
UPSC Relevance:
• Climate Governance & Environmental Policy
• Disaster Management
• Role of Communication in Public Policy
• Decentralized Governance & Community Resilience
