The China Mail - Cities under strain: India's predicted urban boom

USD -
AED 3.672504
AFN 68.232749
ALL 83.558715
AMD 383.502854
ANG 1.789699
AOA 916.999743
ARS 1325.488704
AUD 1.53185
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.699946
BAM 1.678726
BBD 2.017189
BDT 121.342432
BGN 1.675501
BHD 0.377045
BIF 2978.990118
BMD 1
BND 1.283861
BOB 6.900991
BRL 5.438799
BSD 0.999064
BTN 87.452899
BWP 13.442146
BYN 3.297455
BYR 19600
BZD 2.0068
CAD 1.37535
CDF 2890.000084
CHF 0.80602
CLF 0.024682
CLP 968.280176
CNY 7.181498
CNH 7.185075
COP 4050.86
CRC 506.224779
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.644007
CZK 20.931038
DJF 177.901416
DKK 6.39532
DOP 61.011419
DZD 129.914969
EGP 48.4941
ERN 15
ETB 138.627715
EUR 0.85684
FJD 2.251802
FKP 0.743585
GBP 0.74216
GEL 2.7029
GGP 0.743585
GHS 10.536887
GIP 0.743585
GMD 72.502673
GNF 8663.249448
GTQ 7.66319
GYD 208.952405
HKD 7.849901
HNL 26.159526
HRK 6.4565
HTG 130.72148
HUF 338.684501
IDR 16243.6
ILS 3.423565
IMP 0.743585
INR 87.550497
IQD 1308.355865
IRR 42125.000038
ISK 122.530148
JEP 0.743585
JMD 159.95604
JOD 0.708978
JPY 147.494497
KES 128.989738
KGS 87.45005
KHR 4001.940439
KMF 422.149958
KPW 900.000303
KRW 1388.069619
KWD 0.30548
KYD 0.832325
KZT 539.727909
LAK 21608.514656
LBP 89486.545642
LKR 300.373375
LRD 200.248916
LSL 17.702931
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.416892
MAD 9.044505
MDL 16.768379
MGA 4408.879578
MKD 52.719056
MMK 2099.278286
MNT 3593.667467
MOP 8.075018
MRU 39.850605
MUR 45.38032
MVR 15.399005
MWK 1732.384873
MXN 18.57983
MYR 4.23202
MZN 63.960003
NAD 17.702931
NGN 1531.679759
NIO 36.765148
NOK 10.255555
NPR 139.966515
NZD 1.67899
OMR 0.384536
PAB 0.998755
PEN 3.535041
PGK 4.213997
PHP 56.98703
PKR 283.47835
PLN 3.637953
PYG 7482.677794
QAR 3.650401
RON 4.3424
RSD 100.362019
RUB 79.593891
RWF 1445.099361
SAR 3.750526
SBD 8.217066
SCR 14.743516
SDG 600.497543
SEK 9.550685
SGD 1.283485
SHP 0.785843
SLE 23.09428
SLL 20969.503947
SOS 570.964931
SRD 37.279016
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.03564
SVC 8.738681
SYP 13001.771596
SZL 17.701706
THB 32.313974
TJS 9.328183
TMT 3.51
TND 2.928973
TOP 2.342099
TRY 40.735695
TTD 6.779108
TWD 29.88599
TZS 2470.000102
UAH 41.327043
UGX 3563.795545
UYU 40.075533
UZS 12578.000944
VES 128.74775
VND 26228
VUV 119.401149
WST 2.653917
XAF 563.200666
XAG 0.026195
XAU 0.000296
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.800009
XDR 0.700441
XOF 563.203084
XPF 102.364705
YER 240.449743
ZAR 17.703398
ZMK 9001.203984
ZMW 23.152942
ZWL 321.999592
  • RIO

    1.0900

    61.86

    +1.76%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    23.05

    +0.39%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    15.88

    -0.76%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    23.58

    +0.25%

  • BCE

    0.5700

    24.35

    +2.34%

  • BTI

    0.5500

    57.24

    +0.96%

  • RBGPF

    1.2400

    73.08

    +1.7%

  • NGG

    -1.0700

    71.01

    -1.51%

  • BCC

    -1.1000

    82.09

    -1.34%

  • JRI

    0.0250

    13.435

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    0.2200

    37.8

    +0.58%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    73.535

    -0.71%

  • RELX

    -1.0566

    48

    -2.2%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    14.42

    -0.14%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    11.36

    +0.88%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    34.14

    -0.15%

Cities under strain: India's predicted urban boom
Cities under strain: India's predicted urban boom / Photo: © AFP

Cities under strain: India's predicted urban boom

India is projected to see an explosion in its urban population in the coming decades, but its cities already cannot cope and climate change will make living conditions harsher still.

Text size:

The metropolis of Mumbai, one of India's biggest, grew by some eight million people in the past 30 years -- the rough equivalent of the whole of New York City -- to a population of 20 million, and is forecast to add another seven million by 2035.

Like other Indian megacities, Mumbai's housing, transport, water and waste management infrastructure has not kept pace, with around 40 percent of people living in slums.

These crowded collections of ramshackle buildings, side by side with some of India's richest neighbourhoods, often have no regular water, power supply or proper sanitation.

As the world's population approaches eight billion, most of them in the developing world, it is a situation replicated globally.

Those living on the outskirts of Mumbai commute for hours to work, with many hanging out of doors on packed trains, and others travelling by car or motorbike on clogged, pothole-filled roads that flood during the monsoon.

In the biggest slum, Dharavi of "Slumdog Millionaire" fame, where a million people live, Mohammed Sartaj Khan arrived from rural Uttar Pradesh as a teenager and works in a tannery.

"My childhood was wonderful in the village. It has a peaceful environment unlike the crowd here," Khan, now 35, told AFP in Dharavi's warren of lanes.

"When I came here, I saw people running like ants," he said. "The way ants keep walking in their lanes despite the crowd... Nobody cares about others."

But in his village, he added, "people don't have money".

At first, he earned 6,000 rupees ($70) a month in Mumbai but now operates a machine and makes four times that, most of which he sends back to his wife and children -- whom he can seldom afford to visit.

- Premature deaths -

The UN projects that India's population will rise from its current 1.4 billion to overtake China's and peak at 1.7 billion in the 2060s, before dropping back to 1.5 billion by the start of the next century.

By 2040, 270 million more people will live in Indian cities, according to the International Energy Agency, driving carbon emissions higher from power generation and transport, and from the production of steel and concrete to house them.

Overcrowding, shoddy infrastructure and severe air, water and noise pollution are part of everyday life in India's megacities.

About 70 percent of the billions of litres of sewage produced in urban centres every day goes untreated, a government report said last year.

Every winter, the capital New Delhi, home to 20 million people, is cloaked in toxic air pollution that, according to one Lancet study, caused almost 17,500 premature deaths in 2019.

- Droughts and floods -

Millions of people in Indian cities have no regular running water and rely on deliveries by truck or train.

People in Delhi and elsewhere are digging ever-deeper wells as groundwater levels sink.

Chennai in southeastern India ran out of water in the summer of 2019, a crisis blamed on both insufficient rains and urban sprawl onto former wetlands.

At the same time, urban flooding is increasingly frequent.

The tech hub of Bengaluru -- formerly Bangalore -- has some of India's worst traffic congestion and saw inundations in September blamed on unauthorised construction.

Natural catastrophes are forecast to cause more and more misery for India's cities as the planet's climate warms and makes weather more volatile.

Scientists believe the annual monsoon rainy season is becoming more erratic and more powerful, causing more flooding and also more droughts.

Rising temperatures are making Indian summers ever more scorching, particularly in urban areas full of concrete trapping the heat. This year, India saw its hottest March on record.

And while Covid-19 did not affect India's slums as badly as some had feared, overcrowding puts them at risk in future epidemics.

Poonam Muttreja from the Population Foundation of India said more investment in the rural economy could stem migration to cities, while new incentives could encourage people to move to smaller urban centres.

"Poor people, especially migrants in cities, are at the worst risk of climate change, whether it is the changes in the weather or flooding, jobs, lack of infrastructure," Muttreja told AFP.

"India has to have a paradigm shift. And instead of complaining, we need to start doing something."

N.Wan--ThChM