Environment 24 Jun 2026

Climate Change Emerges as a Public-Health Threat for Ageing India

As India's population ages and fertility falls, climate change is emerging as a serious public-health threat to the elderly. A 2026 survey found 78% of older persons faced a climate hazard in three years, exposing gaps in India's adaptation and health frameworks.

upsc state_pcs

India is passing through a deep demographic shift. As fertility rates fall and the share of older people rises, a fresh worry has surfaced: the effect of a warming climate on the elderly. Policies that help the country adapt to extreme weather will now have to be designed with the needs of older citizens in mind.

Older people are roughly a tenth of India's population today, and that share is expected to climb to about one-fifth by 2050. Southern and western states are moving through this transition faster than others. The human body loses its ability to regulate heat as it ages, so long spells of high temperature can overwhelm an elderly person's weakened defences. For someone above 75 with heart disease, diabetes, kidney disease or limited mobility, a single heatwave can turn into a medical emergency.

A 2026 study titled 'Climate Resilient Ageing' surveyed 2,224 older persons across ten states. About 78 per cent said they had faced at least one climate-related hazard in the previous three years, with heatwaves affecting 45 per cent, followed by floods and droughts. Many lacked the savings, support or access to care needed to recover. The finding shows that climate risk for the elderly is not only medical but also social and economic.

India's existing disaster and health frameworks were largely built for a younger population and do not yet treat the elderly as a distinct vulnerable group. Heat action plans, urban cooling, accessible health centres and targeted welfare will have to factor in age. This is also a fiscal question, because an ageing population under climate stress raises long-term demands on the public health system.

For aspirants, this topic sits at the intersection of three high-yield areas: demographic transition, climate vulnerability and public-health governance. It is a strong example to use in essays and answers on how India must redesign adaptation policy for a society that is simultaneously ageing and warming.

Key Points to Remember

  • Elderly are ~10% of India's population now, projected to reach ~20% by 2050
  • The ageing body regulates heat poorly, making heatwaves a medical crisis for those above 75
  • A 2026 survey of 2,224 older persons across 10 states found 78% faced a climate hazard in 3 years
  • Heatwaves affected 45% of respondents, followed by floods and droughts
  • India's disaster and health frameworks do not yet treat the elderly as a distinct vulnerable group
  • Climate adaptation must now combine demographic, health and welfare policy

Exam Relevance

Links demographic transition, climate vulnerability and public-health policy, a recurring theme in UPSC GS-I/GS-II and state PCS social-issues papers.

UPSC STATE_PCS
climate change ageing public health demography environment