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


2. Why in the News


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:

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:


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental

Social / Equity

Economic

Geopolitical / International Negotiations

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's coastline length: more than 7,500 km. [S1]
  2. NAPCC was launched in 2008 and contains 8 National Missions. [S3]
  3. 34 States/UTs have prepared State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCC). [S4]
  4. Nodal ministry for CRZ regulation and coastal climate adaptation: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC).
  5. The CRZ Notification 2019 replaced the earlier CRZ Notification of 1991.
  6. Satabhaya, Odisha: 500+ families relocated (2018) due to Bay of Bengal coastal erosion — to Bagapatia rehabilitation colony. [S1]
  7. Integrated Coastal Zone Management Project (ICZMP): mapped hazard line, eco-sensitive areas, and sediment cells for India's entire coastline. [S4]
  8. Maladaptation is defined by IPCC as adaptation actions that increase vulnerability or create path-dependencies, especially for marginalized groups.
  9. GCF programme on coastal community resilience implemented in Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, and Maharashtra in partnership with UNDP. [S6]
  10. India's new NDC covering 2031–2035 was approved by the Cabinet (2025–26). [S2]
  11. Ecosystem-Based Adaptation (EbA) uses mangroves, coral reefs, and dunes — the alternative to hard coastal engineering.
  12. Disaster Management Act, 2005 is the key legal instrument governing disaster evacuation and rehabilitation in India.
  13. The principle of Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) underpins India's position on both fossil fuel use and adaptation choices at COP.
  14. 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:

  1. "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)
  2. "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)
  3. "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

  1. MoEFCC vs. MoES confusion: Coastal zone regulation (CRZ) = MoEFCC; oceanographic science (sea-level monitoring) = Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES). Do not conflate.
  2. 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.
  3. Managed retreat ≠ displacement — managed retreat implies planned, compensated, rights-respecting relocation; conflating it with forced eviction is a conceptual error.
  4. CRZ 2019 relaxed, not tightened, restrictions — aspirants often assume recent notifications are stricter; the 2019 CRZ is widely criticized for enabling more coastal construction.
  5. 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