As Cities Swell, A World Bank Report Highlights Urgent Need for Resilient Development and Private Sector Partnership. India can learn from China’s urban resilience efforts. Weihai, a pilot city, exemplifies this: facing rising temperatures, it targets limiting climate disaster mortality and economic losses by 2025 and 2035, offering insights for India’s own resilient city development.
New Delhi: India stands at a critical juncture, facing a burgeoning urban population set to nearly double to 951 million by 2050, up from 480 million in 2020. A recent World Bank report, “Towards resilient and prosperous cities in India,” paints a stark picture of the escalating climate risks confronting these urban centers.
Already, India’s ten largest cities have witnessed a staggering 71% increase in extreme heat exposure over three decades, translating to an additional 5.8 billion person-hours annually. This vulnerability is exacerbated by changing rainfall patterns, rising heat stress, and frequent urban flooding, which alone accounts for economic losses equivalent to 0.5-2.5% of the nation’s GDP each year, a figure projected to double under high-emission scenarios. The report warns that without timely intervention, heat-related deaths in cities could double by 2050.
Despite these daunting challenges, the report identifies a significant opportunity: over 50% of India’s required urban infrastructure is yet to be built. This presents a unique chance to embed climate resilience into the very fabric of future urban planning. Indian cities are poised to be powerful engines of economic growth, expected to generate over 70% of new jobs by 2030. To unlock this potential, a substantial investment in climate resilience and the adoption of a green, climate-smart development path are imperative. The private sector, currently a marginal contributor at just 5% of urban infrastructure financing, is urged to play a much larger role, providing both capital and efficiency crucial for building resilient urban infrastructure at scale.
Recognizing the pivotal role of Urban Local Governments, the World Bank report emphasizes strengthening institutions, enhancing staff capacity, improving climate budgeting, and fostering greater private sector engagement. Furthermore, robust data systems are crucial for evidence-based adaptation, ensuring that flood and heat risk mitigation strategies are tailored to specific geographies and urban forms. India’s ambitious climate goals, targeting net-zero emissions by 2070 and a 50% reduction in emissions intensity by 2030, are on track, according to Dr. Jitendra Singh, Union Minister of State, Science & Technology.
Recent initiatives, such as the launch of seven Net-zero Climate Resilient City Action Plans (CRCAPs) in September 2024 (following Ahmedabad’s plan in July 2023), demonstrate a proactive approach. These eight cities alone anticipate requiring over USD 85,000 billion in climate finance by 2070 to achieve up to 91% emissions reduction, alongside the creation of an estimated 800,000 green jobs.
China’s Urban Resilience Drive:
As India navigates this complex urban transition, it can look to international examples. China, too, is making significant strides in urban resilience. A recent report by the Global Centre on Adaptation showcases China’s strategic commitment, exemplified by its 2017 pilot city initiative. Weihai, one such pilot city encompassing 5,797 sq km with 2.9 million residents, is a testament to this effort. Facing a notable temperature increase (0.26°C per decade since the 1970s, accelerating to 2.6°C from 2011-2020), Weihai has set ambitious climate adaptation objectives. By 2025, it aims to limit climate disaster mortality to under 0.5 persons per million and economic losses to under 1% of its GDP, with even more stringent targets for 2035. This multi-pronged approach, focusing on robust climate risk assessment and actionable plans, positions Weihai as a blueprint for China’s broader national vision for climate-adaptive urban development, offering valuable insights for India’s own journey towards resilient and prosperous cities.
The way forward for India:
The growing urban population in India naturally demands resilient development with the infusion of climate considerations. Smart urban planning as a priority, green infrastructure and clean energy investments, and strengthened data systems constitute the tripod on which such a future can be birthed. The private sector must significantly boost its urban infrastructure financing to meet the massive needs and build a truly resilient, prosperous future for India’s cities.
Note: Vishwas Dass is a communications expert and is currently pursuing a Graduate Certificate in Public Policy from The Takshashila Institution, a non-partisan public policy think tank.
