Deepak Dwivedi
For years, climate change was viewed as an environmental challenge the economic consequences of which lay somewhere in the future. That illusion has faded now. Climate change has become an inÀationary force, a fiscal challenge and, increasingly, a household problem. It is raising the cost of living, eroding savings and reshaping consumption patterns across India.
The most immediate impact is visible in household budgets. Successive heatwaves have transformed cooling from a discretionary expense into an essential one. Electricity consumption has surged as air conditioners, coolers and fans run for longer periods, pushing up monthly power bills. Utilities, meanwhile, are compelled to invest heavily in expanding generation and transmission capacity to meet record peak demand. Those costs ultimately find their way back to consumers and taxpayers.
Food inÀation provides an even clearer illustration of climate economics. Agriculture remains heavily dependent on the monsoon despite decades of investment in irrigation. Erratic rainfall, prolonged dry spells, Àash Àoods and unseasonal weather have reduced crop yields and disrupted supply chains. The result is greater volatility in the prices of vegetables, fruits, cereals and pulses. For the Reserve Bank of India, climate-induced food inÀation is emerging as a structural challenge rather than a temporary supply shock, complicating the task of maintaining price stability while supporting growth.
Climate change is also imposing a hidden tax through disaster losses. Floods, cyclones, landslides and urban Àooding destroy homes, vehicles, businesses and public infrastructure with increasing frequency. Governments spend thousands of crores on relief and reconstruction, diverting scarce fiscal resources from health, education and infrastructure.
Climate change is raising cost of living, eroding savings and reshaping consumption patterns
Households, particularly those without adequate insurance, bear much of the financial burden. As climate risks intensify, insurance premiums are likely to rise, while many highrisk locations could become increasingly difficult or expensive to insure. Migration is another economic consequence that receives scant attention. Water scarcity, declining agricultural productivity and repeated climate shocks are accelerating movement from vulnerable rural regions to urban centres. Cities already struggling with housing shortages, congestion and overstretched public services will face additional pressure.
The policy response must, therefore, move beyond emission reduction alone. Adaptation deserves equal priority. Investments in resilient agriculture, eႈcient water management, Àood-resistant infrastructure, early-warning systems, urban planning and aႇordable climate insurance are no longer environmental expenditures; they are economic investments that protect productivity and household wealth.
India’s climate strategy should be judged not merely by the number of solar parks commissioned or emissions reduced, but by whether it shields ordinary citizens from the mounting economic costs of a warming planet. Climate resilience is no longer an ecological aspiration – it is an economic imperative. The sooner policymakers recognise that every climate event is also a household economic event, the better prepared India will be for the decades ahead.












