Climate Voters, Climate Manifesto & Odisha Elections

Farmers know that they need healthy land and reliable weather patterns to sustain their livelihoods; and that temperatures are rising and the growing seasons are shifting. Natural disasters are becoming a regular calendar phenomenon and more frequent and unmanageably severe.

Climate Change

Climate impact is yet to be internalized even by the people who are haplessly at the receiving end. Climate change remains a buzzword and a distant theory. Not difficult to imagine, it is still not an election issue. Let’s take the case of farmers in Odisha. The small, marginal, and landless farmers of Odisha, about 6 million in number would hardly realise the actual impact of climate change on their produce and livelihoods, even though they have to live through the climate-induced challenges impacting their yields, over time. The soil conditions, humidity levels, elevation & land topography, fast-changing vegetation, and erratic rainfall don’t go unnoticed by the seasoned farmers. Few, sporadic NGO interventions, here and there in pilots do not enable smallholder farmers, who are the majority of the farming community, with the know-how to adapt to the impact of climate change. A FIDR indicative study finds that they are not able to select the right farming and livelihood options to improve their food security and incomes. This directly affects approximately 1/4th of the State's GDP.

Farmers know that they need healthy land and reliable weather patterns to sustain their livelihoods; and that temperatures are rising and the growing seasons are shifting. Natural disasters are becoming a regular calendar phenomenon and more frequent and unmanageably severe. With an average landholding of 1.25 ha per farmer, which is low, one cyclone breaks the backbone of the individual farmer and the entire community. Odisha region has experienced the landfall of at least four major cyclones in the last two decades. The Super Cyclone of 1999, Phailin of 2013, Hud Hud of 2014, Titli of 2018, Fani, the blizzard of disasters, have spelt unimaginable disasters for the livelihoods of the agrarian population. A study says that the number of extremely hot days in the state will increase by 30 times from 1.62 in 2010 to 48.05 by 2100. The desertification and water shortage will severely cripple our agrarian economy, which translated to numbers mean 30% of the Net State Domestic Product (NSDP) and about 75% of employment (the workforce engaged in this sector). The GDP per capita of Rs 1,50,000 plus will slide down due to climate pressure, which will leave a trail of destruction, ravaged lives, and destroyed families and livelihoods. Do the households in villages attribute their VUCA future to climate change? Is this what they understand of the most repeated, voguish term Climate Change? Is climate change just a jargon, which they believe, occurs somewhere else and not in their lives and houses? Although about twelve percent of farmers, from the sample studied by FIDR, believe that climate change is occurring, they attribute it to human activity.