Page added on April 23, 2007
Towns and cities along India’s eastern coast will be devastated with global warming intensifying cyclones and rising sea levels eroding vast stretches of the shoreline, a climate official said yesterday.
Experts warn that as temperatures rise, the Indian subcontinent – home to about one-sixth of humanity – will be badly hit with more frequent and more severe natural disasters such as floods and storms and more disease and hunger.
Millions live along India’s 3,700km eastern coast and remain vulnerable to storms, flooding and tsunamis. The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami killed some 230,000 people, around 16,000 of them in India.
Sanyal said the wind speed of cyclones hitting the eastern states of Andhra Pradesh and Orissa had almost doubled to 250km per hour from 150km per hour in 2000.
In addition, sea levels in some parts of the Bay of Bengal were rising at 3.14mm annually against a global average of 2 mm, threatening the low-lying areas of eastern India.
Water levels off the coast of Khulna in Bangladesh were rising at an even higher rate of 10mm every year, Sanyal added.
Officials say rising sea levels are eroding one metre of land every year along the coast of West Bengal state, inundating more and more coastal areas every year and leaving them “highly vulnerable”.
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