What Will Happen To Indian Subcontinent’s ~2 Billion People As Temperatures Soar?
by James
Ayre
September
11th, 2017
One
of the real riddles out there as regards the future effects of
anthropogenic climate change is with regard to the inevitable
mass migrations. The situation on the Indian subcontinent, in
particular, really makes one wonder. Where do ~2 billion some people
go when the region they are living in becomes truly uninhabitable?
In
some of the hotter parts of the region, the day when it’s not
possible to remain where one is without dying of heat stroke or
dehydration probably isn’t that far off. The hottest parts of
Pakistan, for instance — where temperatures of +125° Fahrenheit
are already not that uncommon — would probably qualify on that
count.
A
number of recent studies have predicted that huge swathes of the
Indian subcontinent, and neighboring parts of South Asia as well,
could be uninhabitable by (or perhaps well before) 2100.
The
thing to keep in mind about that prediction, though, is that the same
situation holds true for many other parts of the world — including
the relatively nearby regions of the Middle East, North Africa, and
Southern Europe.
With
that being the case, it’s not “just” a large portion of the
nearly 2 billion people now living in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka, and neighboring countries that will be on the move on a
mass scale. Peoples all throughout the Middle East, Africa, Southern
Europe, and parts of Asia will be forced to migrate or die as well.
And the situation in many parts of the Americas isn’t much
different. Though, it doesn’t seem very likely that many living
there will end up trying to migrate to Asia, Europe, Australia, or
Africa.
Looking
at the way that people deal with one another in even the best of
times — and also looking at recent history of the last few hundred
years or so of ethnic and religious violence (usually driven by
resource constraints) in Asia, Europe, and Africa — the reality of
these looming mass migrations doesn’t bode well.
It
seems, in other words, that a global scale “repeat” of the
Völkerwanderung of the late Roman Empire — which saw Germanic and
Slavic peoples swarm into Europe and displace and/or kill off the
“Europeans” of the time — is now gearing up.
Or
perhaps it’ll be a situation like the one that accompanied the Late
Bronze Age Collapse — which saw Celtic and other (mostly)
“Indo-European” peoples mass migrate into Europe from Anatolia,
the Near East, and elsewhere, and then swamp out and/or kill off many
of the peoples living there at the time. Who can say at this point?
One
thing that can probably can be said for sure, though, is that
politicians and those in positions of power won’t likely speak
honestly about the causes of the massive problems that they will be
facing. Not publicly anyways.
Because
doing so would mean telling people the one thing that they probably
don’t want to hear more than anything else: The way of living that
we’ve been pursuing over the last few hundred years has trashed the
planet and the blowback has only now just begun. Or: Everything needs
to change, cause the party’s over.
Modern
political systems don’t really allow for that kind of blunt talk by
politicians, do they?
With
regard to rising temperatures on the Indian subcontinent, a recent
study published in the journal Science
Advances warns
of “summer heat waves with levels of heat and humidity that exceed
what humans can survive without protection” if extremely strong
actions to immediately curtail global greenhouse gas emissions aren’t
taken.
Phys.org provides
more: “About 30% of the population across the region would be
exposed to the scalding temperatures, up from 0% at present, the
report added. The densely populated, rural farming regions of the
subcontinent could be hit the hardest, where workers are exposed to
heat with little or no chance to retreat to air-conditioning.
“…
Pakistan
continues to be one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to the
effects of climate change, with its northern glaciers melting and
population surging along with fast diminishing water supplies.”
The
recent study notes that: “Deadly heat waves could begin within as
little as a few decades to strike regions of India, Pakistan, and
Bangladesh, including the fertile Indus and Ganges river basins that
produce much of the region’s food supply.”
To
drive home that point (the way that some of the hotter parts of the
region are just barely remaining habitable), I’ll include a quote
here from the Phys.org article
from a fellow named Lakhmir Brahmani who apparently works in extreme
+50° Celsius heat at construction sites to provide for his family.
Discussing
why he doesn’t move his family to a cooler region, Brahmani states:
“I have no house or personal land … we have no electricity. How
could I go to (provincial capital) Quetta or other areas where the
cost of a truck or tractor ride one way is Rs 10,000 ($95), which I
hardly earn in a whole month?”
In
other words, money and transportation are the barriers. For now. What
happens when there’s nothing left to lose? What about young guys
without family, who are already in that situation? It’s not a
mystery why most of those who migrate across continents are young
men. Nor is it a mystery why militias and criminal groups have a much
easier time recruiting from amongst them. What happens when whole
regions of people find themselves with nothing to lose?
Considering
the subcontinent’s Sikhs, Muslims, Christians, Jains, Zoroastrians,
Buddhists, Baha’i followers, etc., I’m going to end things here
with this line: “When Shiva dances, worlds burn.”
There
are some very rough times ahead.
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