Extreme weather events: 11 vulnerable dysts – News2IN
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Extreme weather events: 11 vulnerable dysts

Extreme weather events: 11 vulnerable dysts
Written by news2in

New Delhi: Eleven of 36 districts in Maharashtra have been found ‘very vulnerable’ for extreme weather events, drought and breastfeeding water security and taking into account nearly 40 percent of the area trimmed throughout Maharashtra, the latest studies have been found.
Agricultural Area 37 percent of countries spread across 14 districts are quite vulnerable, which takes the calculation of the three regions of the areas trimmed by Maharashtra as high as vulnerable to the applicable climate crisis, socio-economic vulnerability to the climate change index.
Development and mapping for districts in Maharashtra ‘have found, the word release here.
However, this research does not include Mumbai and suburban districts in the analysis.
Farmers from Maharashtra Barat and Konkan have struggled against the worst floods in recent times.
This study added that extreme climate conditions affect the livelihood and the agrarian economy Maharashtra might be worse than here.
This study was conducted by Chaitanya Adhav from the Indian Agricultural Research Council (ICAR) in the Dairy Research Institute (NDRI), Karnal, Haryana, under the guidance of R.
Sendhil from the ICAR-India Institute of Wheat and Barley Research.
Nandurrar in North Maharashtra is the most vulnerable district for cyclones, floods, droughts, changing the pattern of rainfall and extreme temperatures, affecting plant production.
10 other very vulnerable districts including Buldhana, Beed, Jalna, Aurangabad, Hingoli, Parbhani, Nanded, Akola, Amravati and Washim.
Regency 14 which is quite vulnerable including Dhule, Jalgaon, Ratnagiri, Sindhudurg, Sangli, Solapur, Osmanabad, Latur, Yavatmal, Wardha, Chandrapur, Bhandara, Gondia and Gadchiroli.
According to the 2019 Indian livelihood report, agriculture is the main source of livelihood for 51 percent of the Maharashtra population.
Adhav said the findings showed that most of the regencies were very vulnerable to falling under the Plateau Zone of Maharashtra Center, which was 22.22 percent of the shares of the total area trimmed in Maharashtra.
The middle Vidarbha zone has an additional part of 6.78 percent of the area that is very vulnerable.
The authors explained that to measure the risk of induced climate change, the socio-economic vulnerability index (SEVI) was calculated using an intergovernmental panel approach to climate change (IPCC), given the main climate parameters such as exposure, sensitivity and district adaptive capacity for climate vulnerabilities.
Data is collected in 44 indicators related to the climate and socio-economic variables, which are identified based on the opinion of experts.
“District mapping shows that there is an instant need for policy efforts focused on overcoming socio-economic vulnerability in the Central Maharashtra Plateau Zone, a scarcity zone (Dhule, Nandurbar and Aurangabad parts), and the East Vidarbha zone,” Adhav said.
Nine districts – Palghar, Thane, Raigad, Nashik, Satara, Kolhapur, Ahmednagar, Nagpur and Pune – found at least vulnerable to climate agricultural pressure, the broadcast said.
The dominant plants from these districts that will bear the burden of climate change in the future including jowar, rice, wheat, sugar cane, cotton, yeast, cashew nuts, wheat and millet, add scientists, even when they show How there are many discussions about the effects of climate change on agriculture, but very few actions are being taken on the ground.
Shows that changes in plant patterns are a solution that will not be an easy task, agricultural expert and trustee Marathwada Sheti Sahayak Mandal (MSMM), the movement of citizens, Vijay Anna Borade, said, “We need to make parallel.
Program with adequate drainage, Drip irrigation, plant rotation etc.
To get stability in plant productivity and stable income for farmers.
Only so we can divert farmers to change their plant patterns.
Other choices, which also have financial limitations.
“Over the past decade, there was a severe drought 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2018, hailstorms were large in 2014 and 2015, and excess rainfall and floods in 2016, 2019 and 2021.
For the Concendary, the situation has been exacerbated because the impact of the BACK-TO-BACK NERERGA and Tauktae Year 2020 and 2021.
Akshay Deoras, an independent meteorologist and a PhD student at the University of Reading in England, M Remember, “The lack of dissemination system for strong weather estimates adds vulnerability.
Weather and heating plants are sent through various channels, but the service needs.
To increase to make a significant positive impact on farmers.

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