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Act NOW

Renjini Liza Varghese


Globally, many countries recorded August 2023 as one of the hottest months. While some nations reported August to be the hottest in a century, some others noted it to be warmer in some decades.

Even in India, we recorded higher-than-normal temperatures. Many states and regions recorded explicit climate change. The high-terrain states like Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh were reeling under cloud bursts, heavy rains, landslides… The devastation continues. On the other hand, states like Kerala or Maharashtra, which should have been receiving monsoon showers, recorded very few monsoon showers. To the extent that Kerala was forced to sign more PPAs (the state meets 90% of its supply from hydro) for supply from other states.

In this context, India’s presidency at the G20 was keenly watched event. Climate action topped the agenda. Held in New Delhi on 9-10 September 2023, with ‘Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam’ (One Earth, One Family and One Future) as a theme, the leaders discussed steps to accelerate action to tackle climate change. The cooperation of G20 members plays a critical role in shaping the way forward.

It is an open fact now — the cascading effects have reversed the progress made in the 2030 Agenda and its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). No doubt, the global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions continue to increase, adversely affecting lives and livelihoods. As per reports by the UN, globally, challenges like poverty and inequality, climate change, pandemics and conflicts disproportionately affect women, children and the most vulnerable.

In the document released after the G20 meeting, the G20 Leaders agreed to take concrete action through partnerships.

They committed to 12 major points, of which I list the primary 5.

  • Accelerate the full and effective implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
  • Pursue low-GHG/low-carbon emissions, climate-resilient and environmentally sustainable development. We will urgently promote Lifestyles for Sustainable Development (LiFE) and conserve biodiversity, forests and oceans.
  • Scale up financing from all sources to accelerate progress on SDGs.
  • Accelerate efforts and enhance resources towards achieving the Paris Agreement, including its temperature goal.
  • Close gender gaps and promote women’s full, equal, effective and meaningful participation in the economy as decision-makers.

I want to draw your attention to the officially released document. It elaborately touches upon the criticality of the energy transition, circularity, climate financing, the need to battle plastic pollution, the adoption of technology and gender equality. The document highlighted the role of private entities and corporations in climate action.

The document paves the way for concrete action. It lays down principles and opens avenues for partnerships. This means the time for action is NOW. Start ACTING. I would love these concluded points to turn into actions immediately. In my opinion, we have crossed the tipping point…. We are on the slide; the disaster can swallow us in a fraction of a second.

The pledge is taken. Promises made. Act NOW


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Kerala Diaries -2

Renjini Liza Varghese


We all speak about water conservation, recharging the soil, and rainwater harvesting at length. Here is a second snippet I want to share after I wrote the first blog on my Kerala Diaries.

Kerala is a state blessed with rains throughout the year. Monsoon, return monsoon, intermittent summer rains, rains due to depression in the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal and so on. The months we really don’t receive rainfall were perhaps limited to March and April until five years ago.
In the recent past, the rain pattern has changed dramatically because of climate change. For the past few years, the state has witnessed acute water shortage during the summers starting Feb till May. What is causing this?

Considering the abundant rains, water scarcity was unheard of till about 2012-2013. However, unplanned construction, concretization of open areas which prevent #waterrecharge is leading to water scarcity, and gradual #deforestation are leading to the chaos.

My home in Kerala is on an elevated terrain. And the slope of the topography makes it easy for water to seep into the soil and store water. My father, who witnessed concretization around us, had forecast natural catastrophe in the neighbourhood. His prediction was accurate. The region faces water shortage during the summers as all the courtyards have been covered with pavement blocks or concretized. These prevent the water from seeping into the soil, and now; there is a dearth of natural resources that can retain or harvest water.

Every drop of water that falls in our house and surrounding areas seeps into the soil. A small boundary wall prevents the water from draining off the compound and instead diverts directly to the well. End result? In summer, when my neighbours face acute water issue, this well is replenished with fresh water.

Lessons learnt:
Optimize naturalresources,
Water recharge is a must,
Focus on soil and waterconservation,
Understand and respect your environment


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