Climate Change is the Revert Factor for Depletion of Natural Resources and Deprivation of Development Scenario
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17213522Keywords:
Carban emission, Eco system, Energy consumption, Economics burden of climate change, The world Meteorological organization, Ocean acidification, Greenhouse gas concentrationAbstract
One of the most urgent issues worldwide is climate change, where its effects are extensive to the ecosystems, the health of citizens, and economic growth. The paper will examine the economic, environmental, and social impacts of climate change, and specifically, the vulnerability of India and their policy response. With access to secondary data sources, the paper analyses some of the major indicators like carbon emissions, greenhouse gas concentrations, ocean acidification, sea-level rise, and energy consumption trends. In the World Meteorological Organization evidence, record-all-time emission, and ocean stress levels, and in COP27 international negotiation, the controversial question of the vulnerable countries with the financing of the concept of Loss and Damage comes to the fore. The paper, using case studies in Joshimath, Wayanad and Tamil Nadu, explains how unsustainable urbanization, deforestation and coastal erosion contribute to the height of climate hazards. The tension between sustainability and economic growth in India can be supported by the fact that India remains dependent on coal even after the growth of renewable energy. The paper also examines the health consequences of climate change, such as spreading of vector-borne infections, respiratory diseases, and pandemic threats. The results indicate that the burden of climate change is inclined towards low-income countries and the developed world that has always been the biggest emitter has been reluctant to meet its financial obligations. The paper is a call to spread global responsibility equally, speed up the switch to low-carbon economy, resilient infrastructure to climate change, and agricultural innovation to cope with the evolving weather patterns. Finally, climate change is a crisis of the environment and economy, which should be addressed by unified international effort. The developed countries should aid the weak economies via fair-financing solutions, whereas the developing countries should strike a balance between development and sustainability where India stands to gain long-term.