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Migrant Laborers in India Face Increased Heat Stress Driven by Climate Warming and ENSO Variability

Climate change | Public and global health

First published: 30 October 2025

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    08-11-2025 to 08-11-2026

    Available on-demand until 8th November 2026

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Article

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

Migrant laborers typically work long hours at physically demanding tasks without air conditioning, and they account for a considerable fraction of India's population—a share that is increasing with urban growth. However, changes in heat stress and labor capacity in major urban centers that attract rural-to-urban work migrants remain unexplored. Moreover, it remains unclear how the increased heat stress and reduced labor capacity under the warming climate will alter the most preferred workplaces for migrant laborers in India. Here, we use station-based observations, reanalysis data, and climate model projections to reconstruct trends and variability in heat stress metrics, including wet-bulb temperature for indoor exposure and wet-bulb globe temperature for outdoor exposure based on migrant data from the 2011 Census. We show that during 1980–2021, most rural-to-urban migration hotspots in north, east, and southern India witnessed a significant (p < 0.05) rise in Tw, indicating elevated indoor heat stress. Over that interval, outdoor heat stress has considerably increased and led to a ∼10% decline in labor capacity in these hotspots. A substantial rise in the indoor and outdoor heat stress exposure of migrants and a reduction in their physical labor capacity is projected with each additional degree of global warming. El Niño-Southern Oscillation variability can also significantly enhance these effects. Effective mitigation and adaptation options are needed to reduce the risks migrant workers face due to increasing indoor and outdoor heat stress in India.

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