Caught between concrete and panic, India should not maladapt to climate change
Caught Between Concrete and Panic: India Should Not Maladapt to Climate Change
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-III / GS-I | Environment & Disaster Management
1. At a Glance
- Core tension: India faces a binary trap in coastal climate policy — hard engineering (seawalls, tetrapods, concrete revetments) vs. managed retreat inland; the article argues for a third way grounded in equity and sustainability. [S1]
- Maladaptation — adaptation measures that inadvertently increase long-term vulnerability, shift risk to marginalized groups, or lock communities into unsustainable pathways — is the central analytical risk. [S1]
- With >7,500 km of coastline and millions in low-lying coastal zones, India's choices will set precedents for Global South coastal policy for decades. [S1]
- UPSC relevance: cuts across Disaster Management, Climate Change, Social Justice, Governance, and International Negotiations — high-probability GS-III and Essay topic.
2. Why in the News
- Article published 5 June 2026 (World Environment Day) in The Hindu, by Vasudevan Mukunth, flagging the risk of climate maladaptation in India's coastal response. [S1]
- Satabhaya, Odisha (2018): Odisha government relocated 500+ families from seven villages almost entirely consumed by the Bay of Bengal to a rehabilitation colony at Bagapatia — a concrete example of forced managed retreat. [S1]
- India's NDC (2031–2035) approved by Cabinet (recent PIB, 2025–26) reaffirms climate adaptation commitments, adding urgency to the policy debate. [S2]
- COP summits (2024–25): India's Union Environment Minister publicly defended developing nations' right to extended fossil-fuel off-ramps; the same logic is being applied by adaptation experts to coastal engineering. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2002 | Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) concept introduced in India |
| 2008 | National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) launched — 8 National Missions including National Water Mission and National Mission for Sustaining Himalayan Ecosystem [S3] |
| 2009–11 | State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCC) mandated; 34 States/UTs prepared SAPCCs [S4] |
| 2011 | Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Notification — restricts construction in ecologically sensitive coastal zones |
| 2015–19 | ICZM Project (World Bank-assisted) — hazard line mapping, eco-sensitive area delineation for entire coastline [S4] |
| 2018 | Satabhaya, Odisha relocation — one of India's first large-scale climate displacement and managed retreat exercises [S1] |
| 2019 | MoEFCC report: Climate Change and the Vulnerable Indian Coast — formal acknowledgement of coastal risk [S5] |
| 2023–25 | Green Climate Fund (GCF)-supported programme: Enhancing Climate Resilience of Coastal Communities in Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra (with UNDP) [S6] |
| 2025–26 | Cabinet approves India's new NDC (2031–2035); NAPCC missions updated [S2] |
4. Core Static Facts
Key Definitions:
- Maladaptation: Adaptation actions that increase exposure or vulnerability, especially for the poorest; generate path-dependencies that are hard to reverse; or transfer risk from one group/sector to another. (IPCC AR6 terminology)
- Managed Retreat: Planned, deliberate relocation of people/infrastructure away from high-risk coastal zones; favoured by many high-income country adaptation experts.
- Hard Engineering (Coastal Armoring): Seawalls, groynes, tetrapods, revetments — concrete structures designed to hold the shoreline.
- Ecosystem-Based Adaptation (EbA): Using mangroves, coral reefs, sand dunes as natural coastal buffers.
Institutional Framework:
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Nodal Ministry | Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) |
| Coastal Regulation | CRZ Notification 2019 (replaces 1991 version) |
| National Missions | NAPCC (2008) — 8 missions; National Coastal Mission added subsequently |
| SAPCC | 34 States/UTs have prepared SAPCCs aligned with NAPCC [S4] |
| ICZM | Integrated Coastal Zone Management — maps hazard lines, sediment cells, eco-sensitive areas [S4] |
| GCF Programme | Coastal community resilience in Odisha, AP, Maharashtra — UNDP partnership [S6] |
| IMD Role | Early warning systems for cyclones/storm surges; timely evacuation [S4] |
Key Numbers:
- Coastline length: >7,500 km [S1]
- Families relocated in Satabhaya, Odisha: 500+ (2018) [S1]
- States/UTs with SAPCCs: 34 [S4]
- NAPCC launched: 2008 [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Environmental
- Sea-level rise (thermal expansion + cryosphere melt) accelerates shoreline change; India's hazard line maps document this for the entire coast. [S4][S5]
- Mangroves and coral reefs function as natural coastal buffers; their destruction (including by coastal construction itself) removes adaptive capacity — a textbook maladaptation feedback loop. [S6]
- Hard coastal engineering can cause downdrift erosion — protecting one stretch displaces erosion risk to adjacent unprotected areas, often inhabited by poorer communities. [S1]
Social / Equity
- Managed retreat disproportionately burdens the poor — landless laborers and fishing communities have no economic fallback; relocation severs livelihood ties to the sea. [S1]
- Coastal engineering ("hold the line") tends to protect high-value real estate and tourism infrastructure, while informal settlements remain unprotected or are displaced to make room for seawalls. [S1]
- The Satabhaya case illustrates both the necessity and the trauma of displacement — the Bay of Bengal devoured the villages regardless of state inaction. [S1]
Economic
- Developing countries, including India, cite poverty trap logic: abrupt abandonment of cheapest energy or cheapest infrastructure solutions risks plunging millions back into poverty. [S1]
- Coastal armoring is capital-intensive and maintenance-heavy; over multi-decade horizons it may be more expensive than planned retreat combined with livelihood support. [S1]
- Lock-in effect: concrete infrastructure creates economic and political path-dependencies — once built, communities and investments cluster around protected areas, making future retreat politically impossible.
Geopolitical / International Negotiations
- At COP summits, India argues for Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) — the same equity argument applied to fossil fuels is being extended to adaptation choices. [S1]
- India positions itself as a voice for the Global South on the right to use engineering adaptation as a developmental off-ramp; this shapes multilateral climate finance negotiations.
- High-income country "managed retreat" advocacy without accompanying loss-and-damage finance is seen as imposing rich-country solutions on poor-country realities. [S1]
Legal / Constitutional
- CRZ Notifications (1991, 2011, 2019) regulate coastal construction; the 2019 version was criticized for relaxing restrictions, potentially enabling maladaptive development.
- Coastal communities' rights implicate Article 21 (right to life and livelihood) when relocation is coerced without adequate rehabilitation.
- Disaster Management Act, 2005 governs evacuation and rehabilitation frameworks — key legal scaffold for managed retreat.
Administrative / Governance
- Centre-State split: coastal zone management is a concurrent subject; state governments control land use while MoEFCC sets CRZ norms — creating regulatory gaps.
- SAPCC quality varies sharply across states; implementation lags planning, with insufficient funding and technical capacity at local bodies.
- The Satabhaya relocation (2018) is criticized for inadequate livelihood restoration — a governance failure that illustrates why managed retreat can become maladaptation if done poorly. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 2025–26: Cabinet approves India's NDC for 2031–2035, reaffirming adaptation goals alongside mitigation targets. [S2]
- 2025: Parliamentary question (PIB) confirms NAPCC missions remain the primary vehicle for climate adaptation nationally. [S3]
- 2025: GCF-backed coastal community resilience programme active in Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra — integrates EbA and community-based adaptation into coastal planning. [S6]
- June 5, 2026 (World Environment Day): The Hindu publishes op-ed framing coastal maladaptation as India's critical policy challenge — signals growing mainstream policy debate. [S1]
- COP negotiations (2024–25): India's Environment Minister reiterates CBDR on fossil fuels; same logic now invoked in adaptation context. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- India's coastline length: more than 7,500 km. [S1]
- NAPCC was launched in 2008 and contains 8 National Missions. [S3]
- 34 States/UTs have prepared State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCC). [S4]
- Nodal ministry for CRZ regulation and coastal climate adaptation: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC).
- The CRZ Notification 2019 replaced the earlier CRZ Notification of 1991.
- Satabhaya, Odisha: 500+ families relocated (2018) due to Bay of Bengal coastal erosion — to Bagapatia rehabilitation colony. [S1]
- Integrated Coastal Zone Management Project (ICZMP): mapped hazard line, eco-sensitive areas, and sediment cells for India's entire coastline. [S4]
- Maladaptation is defined by IPCC as adaptation actions that increase vulnerability or create path-dependencies, especially for marginalized groups.
- GCF programme on coastal community resilience implemented in Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, and Maharashtra in partnership with UNDP. [S6]
- India's new NDC covering 2031–2035 was approved by the Cabinet (2025–26). [S2]
- Ecosystem-Based Adaptation (EbA) uses mangroves, coral reefs, and dunes — the alternative to hard coastal engineering.
- Disaster Management Act, 2005 is the key legal instrument governing disaster evacuation and rehabilitation in India.
- The principle of Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) underpins India's position on both fossil fuel use and adaptation choices at COP.
- Early warning systems for coastal cyclones/storm surges are operated by the India Meteorological Department (IMD). [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-III | Environment — Climate Change, Disaster Management, Conservation |
| GS-II | Governance — Implementation of policies; Social Justice — vulnerable sections |
| GS-I | Geography — Coastal geomorphology, human settlements |
| Essay | Ethics of development, equity, and climate justice |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
- "Hard coastal engineering protects assets but entrenches inequality. Critically examine India's coastal adaptation strategy in light of the risk of maladaptation." (GS-III, 15 marks)
- "The managed retreat versus coastal armoring debate in India is fundamentally a question of whose interests are being protected. Discuss with reference to relevant legal and institutional frameworks." (GS-II/III, 15 marks)
- "India's argument for a developmental off-ramp on fossil fuels applies equally to coastal engineering choices. Evaluate the normative and practical dimensions of this claim." (Essay / GS-III, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) — 8 Missions | Parent policy framework for all Indian adaptation measures |
| Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Notifications | The legal instrument governing coastal land use and construction |
| Loss and Damage (COP28/29) | International finance for climate-displaced communities — directly relevant to managed retreat |
| Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030) | Global framework for disaster resilience; overlaps with managed retreat and EbA |
| IPCC AR6 — Adaptation Chapter | Defines maladaptation formally; basis for all exam-level definitions |
| Mangrove Conservation in India | Natural coastal buffers vs. hard engineering — MoEFCC's National Mangrove Committee |
| Climate Justice and CBDR | Equity arguments in international climate negotiations — India's negotiating position |
| Disaster Management Act 2005 and NDMA | Legal/institutional backbone for evacuation, rehabilitation, managed retreat |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- MoEFCC vs. MoES confusion: Coastal zone regulation (CRZ) = MoEFCC; oceanographic science (sea-level monitoring) = Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES). Do not conflate.
- NAPCC has 8 missions, not 9 or 12 — frequently misremembered; the National Coastal Mission was added separately, it is not one of the original 8.
- Managed retreat ≠ displacement — managed retreat implies planned, compensated, rights-respecting relocation; conflating it with forced eviction is a conceptual error.
- CRZ 2019 relaxed, not tightened, restrictions — aspirants often assume recent notifications are stricter; the 2019 CRZ is widely criticized for enabling more coastal construction.
- Maladaptation is not the same as non-adaptation — maladaptation involves taking action that worsens long-term outcomes; inaction is a separate failure mode. IPCC distinguishes these clearly.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Caught between concrete and panic, India should not maladapt to climate change" — The Hindu, 5 June 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-05/th_international/articleG0KG2Q6BD-14835389.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Cabinet approves India's Nationally Determined Contribution (2031–2035)" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2245209®=3&lang=1 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Parliamentary Question: National Action Plan on Climate Change" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetailm.aspx?PRID=2157522®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "NAPCC (National Action Plan on Climate Change)" — PIB/static — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2021/dec/doc202112101.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "Climate Change and the Vulnerable Indian Coast" — MoEFCC, 2019 — https://moef.gov.in/uploads/2019/10/Climate-Change-and-the-Vulnerable-Indian-Coast_compressed.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S6] "Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change: Coastal Resilience Programme" — PIB — https://pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=1858240 — (Tier 1)