Climate Resilience & Smart Cities
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Climate Resilience & Smart Cities
Prof. Jyoti K Parikh
Executive Director, IRADe
UN Climate Change Conference (COP25)
5th December, 2019

Smart Cities Mission (launched in 2015)
Objectives
Strengthen Basic Infrastructure
Quality of Urban Life
Clean Sustainable environment
Apply smart solution/ IT based
Set examples to be replicated both within and outside the smart
cities and catalyse the creation of similar smart cities
Focus on sustainable and inclusive development in 100 cities and
the idea is to look at compact areas, create a replicable model which
will act like a light house to other aspiring cities
100 smart Cities

Smart Cities – Mission Strategies
Integrated Smart
Solution
Total Winning Proposals
100
Total Urban
population Impacted
99,630,069
Total Cost of Projects
(₹ Cr.)2,05,018

Smart Cities – Financial
• 100 Smart Cities to make investment of ₹2.05 lakh crore
• 35,085 Cr ( 17.11 %) investment in Climate / Environment Sector
Smart Cities Mission An Overview of implementation.
http://smartcities.gov.in/upload/presentation/5c4834d78cdb30_SCM%20Prez_for%20CLAF_v3.pdf

ClimateSmart Cities Assessment Framework
• The Ministry adopted a systemic approach to
implement the first phase of the assessment under
Smart City Mission
• First-of-its-kind assessment on climate relevant
parameters
• Aims to provide a clear road map for Indian cities
towards combating Climate Change
• Includes 30 diverse indicators across 5 sectors

IRADe Climate Adaptive Programme
Geographical Coverage:
32 Project cities & 19 Indian States
Disaster Resilience & Smart Cities: 25 Cities, India
Action Plan for Heat Stress Management: 3 Cities, India & South
Asia
Prediction of Dengue with Climate Change : 2 Cities, India
Air Pollution & Human Health
22 out of 100 Smart Cities - IRADe Project Cities
IRADe Centre of Excellence: Urban Development & Climate Change

Sustainable Urban Development
DISASTER RESILIENCE
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
HEALTH RESILIENCE
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE & SERVICES
Disaster Resilience Action Plans
Disaster Management Strategies
Air Pollution Action Plan
Climate Adaptive Heat Stress Action
Plans
Early warning systems –Dengue
management
Solar City Action Plans
Waste management
Vulnerability Assessment
Vulnerability Index
Roadmap for Climate Resilient
smart Cities
Policy Landscape for Climate Resilience
GIS & Remote Sensing applications
Critical infrastructure mapping

Disaster Resilience

India’s Climate Disaster Vulnerability
Andhra Pradesh incurred Economic losses
of 7 billion USD due to Cyclone Hudhud,
City of Visakhapatnam was the worst
affected.
Economic losses from Floods in Jammu and
Kashmir, Srinagar - around 16 billion USD,
affected 3.6 million people, it was world’s
worst economic disaster in 2014
• Losses due to floods in Chennai in 2015
were around USD 3 billion (Approx.)
• Total losses in Kerala due to Floods in
2018 estimated to be around 4 billion
by the world bank

India’s Climate Disaster Vulnerability - Economy
• Extreme weather events are costing India $9-10 billion annually - Parliamentary Standing Committee Report
(August 2017)
Hazards Absolute (Billion US$)
Flood 7.47
Wind/ Cyclone 1.16
Coastal Storm Surge 0.72
Earthquake 0.44
Tsunami 0.02
Multi-Hazard 9.83
Average Annual Loss due to Hazards in India

HIGS Framework
H
Hazards: Physical and Meteorological Indicators
•Temperature (Maximum. Minimum)
•Precipitation (Maximum. Minimum)
•Mean Sea Level
•Frequency of Drought
•Frequency of Floods
•Frequency of Cyclones
G
Governance- Institutions
•Participatory
•Transparency
•Accountability
•Response efficiency and capability
•Innovative financing
I
Infrastructure and
Urban Services
•Water supply
•Sewerage system
•Solid waste
management
•Storm water drainage
•Transportation
•Power
•Housing
S
Socio-Economic Indicators
•Demographic composition
(Sex-Ratio, age structure)
•Slum Population (Poverty
status)
•Literacy rate
•Migration flow
•Urbanisation trend and
urban sprawl
HIGS -Climate
Responsive Urban
Development
“H” is Hazard Exposure; “I” stand for Infrastructure, “G” for Governance and “S” for Socio-Economic variables.
Rapid Vulnerability Analysis (RVA) of Cities
HIGS framework for Aimed to assist policy makers, urban planners, city administrators, experts, academicians andstudents in dealing with climate related impacts in cities and formulate adaptation strategies

Rapid Vulnerability Assessment of 20 Indian Cities
Climate Vulnerability profiles of 20 Indian Cities , across 14 states
Coverage of different ecosystem types - coastal, hills, riverine,
mixed (arid and dry).
Developed HIGS as a methodological framework for preparing
Rapid Vulnerability Profiles of the cities
Vulnerability matrix for detailed analysis.
Highlighted Infrastructure, governance and institutional framework
needed for building resilience at city level

Sustainable and Disaster Resilient Urban Development, India:
10 Cities
10 cities selected from 10 states across India
Assessed the state of resilience of selected cities with diverse
physiography/topographic characteristics
Study to develop concrete roadmap to disaster resilience , covering
a wide range of parameters ─ city profile, natural hazard profile,
infrastructure and land use and city management and governance
First of its kind work which was referred for develop smart city
plans for 9 cities by the Ministries.

Exposure to Hazards
• Srinagar, Ahmedabad, Dehradun, Guwahati and Visakhapatnam are among the most vulnerable cities
exposed to numerous natural and man-made hazards (according to the data available)
• Almost all the cities are in flood risk zone and with unplanned development leading to encroachment of
the water bodies, the risk just amplifies
Variables/ Cities Srinagar Ahmedabad Dehradun Visakhapatnam Bhubaneswar Guwahati Hyderabad Bhopal Pune Shillong
Exposure to Hazards
Landslides 3 NA 3 2 NA 1 1 NA 1 1
Floods 3 3 1 3 3 3 1 2 1 1
Wind/ Cyclone 3 2 2 3 3 3 3 2 2 3
Water scarcity NA 3 NA 1 NA NA 2 1 2 NA
Heat waves NA 3 2 1 3 2 2 3 1 NA
Cold Waves 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

Exposure to Hazards
• Srinagar, Ahmedabad, Dehradun, Guwahati and Visakhapatnam are among the most vulnerable cities
exposed to numerous natural and man-made hazards (according to the data available)
• Almost all the cities are in flood risk zone and with unplanned development leading to encroachment of
the water bodies, the risk just amplifies
0
5
10
15
20
Exp
osu
re L
eve
l
Cities
Exposure to hazards
Earthquakes Landslides FloodsWind/ Cyclone Water scarcity Heat wavesCold Waves Industrial Hazards/Fires

Hazard Vulnerability Maps
• Integrated Land-Use-Vulnerability maps, indicating precise location of sites where people, the natural
environment or property are at risk due to a potentially catastrophic event / climate hazards
• Ward level information helps in developing effective planning Adaptive and Mitigation strategies

Hazard Vulnerability Maps Area inundated in Surat 2006 Flood in the two scenarios
• A volume of 28000 cubic meter (cu m) water was
discharged per second from Ukai dam, led to
submergence of 270 sq km area out of a total city
area of approx. 320 sq km.
• More than 90% of the west and north zones was
covered by water
• 50% higher (i.e. 42,000 cu m per sec) water is
discharged, then almost 295 sq km area would get
submerged, an increase of 9.25% over that of 2006
level.
• most of the parts of west and north zones will get
submerged with the increase of 50% in discharge
(black circles highlight
areas with potentially
more inundation in
second scenario)
In the second scenario, 230 sq km area gets submerged under 6 meters of water level whereas in the first scenario
about 100 sq km rea was found under water level of 6 m

Comprehensive Disaster DRR
Response -Efforts to minimize the impact of a disaster (coordinated search and rescue, emergency relief, early
warning). It may last for few days to 4-5 weeks.
Recovery - Returning the community to normal (rehabilitation efforts through temporary shelters, grants,
medical care). It may take few weeks to 6 months.
Risk reduction - Minimizing the effects of disaster (updating building codes and zoning, vulnerability analyses,
public education, etc.), planning how to respond (preparedness plans, emergency exercises/training, warning
systems). This is a continuous, iterative and long term process.
RestructureRisk
ReductionRecovery &
Rehabilitation
Alert, Response &
Rescue

Climate Adaptive Heat Stress Action Plans

Heat Wave – Silent Disaster
Among all Natural Hazard Mortality, share of Heat
Mortality is highest in India
Annual mean land surface air temperatures anomalies averaged over
India for the period 1901- 2018.(IMD. 2019)
Climate Change
Frequency, duration and severity of heat
waves has increased during last 50 years

India’s Heat Stress Scenario
Heat Hot Spots – 2000-2014
Source: NCRB
Year Death Record
(NDMA)
2010 1274
2011 798
2012 1247
2013 1216
2014 1677
2015 2422
2016 1111
2017 220
2018 25
• Since 2015 - 2019 witnessed consecutive year of
high temperature.
• June and July, 2019 was the warmest month on
records
• The city of Ahmedabad had a major heat wave in
May 2010, which led to 1,344 additional deaths
registered in the city during the month of May
• May 20-27th – excess deaths 800 in one week in
Ahmedabad
• Till 2018, 30 cities and 12 states in India have
developed/ Adopted Heat Action Plans

Climatological Variance – 3 Cities
Delhi Bhubaneshwar Rajkot
March getting heated at
relatively faster rate than rest
of the summer months.
March (1.2 °C)
March records relatively
higher temperature than
other summer months
March (1.42°C)
April records relatively
higher temperature than
other summer months
April (1.2°C)

Spatial Variation of TemperatureThermal Hotspots Maps - Delhi

Spatial Variation of TemperatureThermal Hotspots Maps - Bhubaneshwar

Spatial Variation of TemperatureThermal Hotspots Maps - Rajkot

Vector Borne Disease - Dengue

India Burden of Dengue
1780, 1st Dengue like incidence in
Chennai
1956-61, Vellore T.N
1963-64, 1st
Epidemic in Calcutta & East
Coast (200 Deaths)
1967, Delhi & Asansol
1968-69, Kanpur U.P.
1970, Hardoi U.P.1985, Jalore, Rajasthan & Maharashtra
1988, Delhi & areas of Gujarat
1990, Calcutta1993, Mangalore,
Karnataka
1996, Delhi, Lucknow, Ludhiana, Haryana
(16517 cases, 545 deaths India) (10252
cases, 423 deaths Delhi)
2006, Delhi, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal,
Tamil Nadu (cases registered 3427)
By 2012, 34 out of 35 states / UTs in India had
reported dengue
2015, Outbreak with 10,683 cases
2017, experienced over 18700 cases

Dengue Indian Scenario
Dengue fever - vector-borne disease is caused by dengue virus transmitted to humans by the infected
mosquitoes Aedes (Ae.) aegypti and Aedes ablopictus
Dengue incidences in India are on the rise and in the recent years has become a major global public health
and considered as a leading cause of hospitalization and death among children (WHO, 2011)
Dengue Incidence Rate (per million population) in India, 1998-2014 (NVBDCP, GoI)

Dengue Indian Scenario

Dengue Scenario- Delhi
• 13 wards out of 14 reported more than 100
Dengue cases in 2017
• Shadara South (East Delhi) and Delhi Cantt.
(Central Delhi) registering above 200
dengue incidences

Dengue Trend - Rajkot
• Dengue incidences has
increased over the years
• 4 wards recorded above 50
incidences in 2018

Alerts

Towards Climate Resilient Smart Cities
Disaster Risk Reduction
DRR should be integrated into city planning.
Identification of vulnerable areas of the city- improve Socio-
economic conditions
Separate budget for DRR
Climate Conscious Development & Spatial
Planning
Infrastructure
Maintenance of infrastructure database- Database
Management and attain Service Level Benchmarks
Reducing per capita water/energy consumption. Improving fuel efficiency.
Crisis management and recovery from smart meters
and advanced Outage Management Systems (OMS)
Strong Governance and Institutional Framework,
Technical Capacity building at Urban Local Body Level
Urban Environment
Passive Design measures to increase thermal comfort
Natural Resource Management Plan
Rejuvenation of water bodies -Recycle/ Reuse of water to be
encouraged
PPP model for the maintenance of public parks.

Climate Adaptive Smart Cities